even with 921, 1326 still in some area constanly dips below 30
from 768 to 921 you got 15% more fps, and draw more than 20% of power
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hope new soc switch at 7nm, room for gain really lot
Can't really see 7nm happening IMO for a new Switch as Nvidia decided against using TSMC 7nm, & all talks of Lovelace (the next gen architecture for Nvidia) is unanimously agreed to be based on TSMC 5nm. For the sake of supply, 8nm is probably gonna be the best case scenario for a new Nintendo Switch (Especially with the Nvidia LinkedIn for a Senior Embedded Graphics Engineer that references implementing DLSS to consoles, & linking towards Nvidia's Orin SoC, which is itself 8nm-based). This in turn, would also make mass production much more less straining, which is absolutely important for Nintendo who wants to sell these to mass markets, as by 2022-2023 8nm supply would likely be completely abandoned in favor for TSMC 5nm).
Best case that can happen for a Switch for extracting more performance is to go balls to the walls with TDP. Modern handheld gaming devices like the GPD Win 3 & the Aya Neo are capable of handling 30W within a sane form factor, Nintendo should go follow their footsteps & accommodate their hardware for handling that level of power consumption (Sure the Switch's cooling has an assload of headroom & you can push it to the sky in clocks if you remove its limits, but by design it's far too risky & damaging for the hardware).