What do you mean it doesn't address your comment?
It breaks down why GN is unhappy and in detail, with facts, not feelings.
If you ain't nitpicking a product to shreds, you ain't doing a detailed review.
If you thought that was GN advertisement, that just shows your bias towards them, not mine.
As for what you call flamboyancy, that's the weekly news, every techtuber does it to feed the YT algorithm. Do you expect them to not voice an initial opinion? Do you not watch anyone else?
It sounds like a GN advertisement because it boils down to mostly just puffery about how great GN is with an implied "You either like GN or you like screwing over consumers", and it doesn't answer the question because the example of them being happy is immediately followed by the caveat that they weren't
fully happy with that product.
I'm not a regular GN viewer anymore, but I used to watch a decent bit of their stuff, and Steve is exceptionally bombastic in some of his complaints. When there's something like this that everyone knows about and everyone is unhappy about and has been widely reported elsewhere, sometimes it does feel like he's compelled to one-up all the other discontent.
As for nitpicking a product to shreds being the only way to do a detailed review... again, I fell off from regular viewership a while ago, but for as much you repeated the word "value", I felt some of his value assessments were... projecting things he valued as an overclocking enthusiast onto the general public. I remember him recommending against a PSU that met or exceeded every standard it claimed to meet because it didn't exceed them by
enough, having a thing for disliking most stock/near-stock GPUs in favor of ones with massive coolers and extra voltage phases for overclocking, and case reviews being almost exclusively coming down to how they scored in a thermal torture test. For overclocking enthusiests buying top-end gear, that's important! For average people trying to get the most mileage for their dollar on a midrange product... it kinda ends up being nitpicking.
To bring it back around to the RTX 5050, we don't know how much it's bottlenecked by memory bandwidth, if it is at all. Nvidia is clearly doing this as a cost savings measure, but if it's hitting other bottlenecks before it hits a memory bandwidth one, then it's kinda questionable engineering to throw more unusuable bandwidth at it, especially if GDDR7 supply is an issue. And even if the desktop 5050 did have GDDR7, the amount of compute for the stated MSRP would still be bad.