Did you even watch the video?
Yes.
Maybe you're not understanding my point. A video that starts off by saying it's fitting to discuss what Teraflops actually mean, and to mention purchasing decisions, he's specifically targeting PS5 and XSX which is the hot topic right now. We know it's not about just about Teraflops when we have to account for other factors like ROPs and bottlenecks, but we know that since Xbox One X, MS has done away with the ESRAM approach and I don't see them going back. Looking at their planned box, it also looks like they're going with something that's consuming more power than a traditional console, so with that form factor, why would anyone assume less ROPs or less bandwidth via slower clocks?
Also, using a PC running numbers vs a console vs is silly when we will be comparing console vs console where both multi-platform games will be highly optimized for both closed platforms compared to how it will run on PC.
Lastly, 750 TI has a different architecture than what's in Xbox One S and only has 2GB of ram, needed to draw Ram from the system when it runs out of VRAM.
So my point? this video will just confuse console gamers trying to make a choice between Xbox Series X vs PS5.
Leaving people to assume the Teraflop difference rumored (12TF vs 9) will be made up by the following:
A) PS5 architecture will be more advanced than XSX (hint: they'll likely be the same)
B) PS5 will have more ROPs than XSX (Highly unlikely, more likely XSX will match or have more given the multi SKU)
C) PS5 will have less bottlenecks (Both will be using GDDR6, much improved CPU and SSD)
D) PS5 will have more RAM (Again unlikely, they will be around the same and GDDR6)
Tune in to 23:50. What is NXGamer trying to talk about?
Here, I'll quote some of it:
"When you get wrapped up talking about hardware, talking about GPUs, consoles performance levels, this is all because is coming out with the... impending PS5 and XSX... it doesn't matter what the Teraflop count is as much as how the overall system is designed, and all the elements together are what the most important part of the machine is"
He's assuming we're not counting all the elements together already. So I disagree, "The Tflops are a lie" is a clickbait title, both systems will be designed very similarly. There is no data or rumors that indicate otherwise. The only thing to debate is whether is a fact that one is 12 and the other is 9. The higher TF machine will be more powerful given a nearly identical setup which we all know they'll have at this point, so damn close that even the SSD idea is the same.