I mentioned the Titan V in my original post, it does not in anyway disprove or go against the point I made, if anything it only cements my point(And if you'd read it rather than jumping at making pedantic and irrelevant points in an attempt to undercut the argument through logical fallacy you'd probably have gathered this). Like I said in my original post, die sizes with current technology are generally limited to at 800+/-25mm^2. GV100 is 815, TU102 is 775, these are both at what are generally considered to be the limit. NVidia is not going to release a GPU with an extra 5mm of die space in each dimension just to cram a couple hundred more cores onto a top-end design that took many years to come to fruition, they're as close to the same size as we can realistically expect them to get. This is the top end. TU102 is already a ~300W chip, even if they did cram on an extra 35mm^2 of die space, it wouldn't have improved performance because of the physical limits imposed by cramming that much thermal energy into such a small area, at that point, even good cooling can't stove off dark silicon(TU102 already has much lower clocks than TU104 due to this problem).
Of course, that's before we even get into the fact that NVidia already put themselves in great financial risk with the launch of TU102, a chip with no competitors equivalent coming until 7nm, which I will again say with certainty, is the fastest GPU we will see on 12nm (Unless you consider Volta faster, which would only be for certain workloads).
Sorry if I come across as a d*** at times, often if I don't assert things at people money ends up getting burnt (Ngl I semi use ranting on here as a release from the stress of actual work). Or maybe it's just my northern "etiquette"(My friends don't get a much friendlier side of me and I'm not sure they want to). I hope no one takes anything I say personally, I'd sprinkle sugar on my words myself but it'd only make them more drawn out and incoherent than they already are.