Not sure what reviews you are reading, ones from Nvidia.com?
The 5700 performs equal, better or only marginally worse compared to the 2060 Super from most of what I saw while costing $50 less, 5700xt was also better, equal or marginally worse than the 2070 Super which is $100 more.
Sure there are titles where AMD performs well, just as there are Gameworks titles that will inevitably give Nvidia the lead, but overall is all that matters.
Nvidia has very mature drivers for the RTX series at this point as well, which gives them a lead on the software side. I'd like to see it tested again in 6 months to see if the ~4 frame gap it has in some benchmarks will be closed.
You seem hell-bent on an nVidia and AMD pissing match I don't care about at all or want anything to do with.The point is I doubt whatever is in the PS5 is better than the 5700xt, and nVidia has cards that beat it or are comparable around the same price point. So I don't see the PS5 making "keeping up" hard for a PC gamer in the raw GPU power front. To me, from everything I'm reading, the way the consoles are heading is dramatic increases in memory and memory speed, so we might need more dramatic improvements in those areas.
Because zero fucking games have ray tracing. Tell me 5 off the top of your head, I can only recall Battlefield 5 and Metro Exodus, two very subpar games.
Whether you care about those games or not it's obviously the future, and both console makers have focused on it in their presentations. Unless you're buying a $400 card without any care at all about future games, which seems like a silly thing to do, it's a factor. Considering the cards are at least comparable at the same price points, why the hell NOT get the one with hardware built-in to handle the ray tracing that will be more and more prominent in the next few years? It's especially compelling in Metro 3 where it changes the whole look of the game in a dramatic way. If "next-gen" games follow suit it's going to be something you want.