I'm not sure what the "noise" column means at senscore.org, could it be the read noise and exclude photon shot noise? That would make the rest of the data reasonable. All the color sensitivity, tonal range are functions of the SNR.
I've noticed (as others have before) that the high ISO noise reduction (turned on in camera, activates the Noise Reduction feature in Capture NX-D when it is used as the raw converter), creates quite bad looking blotches of blur at very high ISO (e.g. 8000-12800 are the images that I'm looking at) and I by far prefer High ISO NR OFF. I'm pretty shocked at how inconsistently the algorithm handles detail. I haven't used such ridiculous ISO settings in previous cameras so I'm not sure if this is a new bug or something that always was there but I didn't notice since I was working with lower ISO settings. I think the problem is so severe that I feel the need to contact Nikon about it. It just can't be right. Anyway, without NR, processed in NX-D, the files look good, and at low to medium high ISOs (up to, say, 3200) I haven't noticed offensive artifacts but I haven't looked carefully where these start to occur. I think I'll just turn high ISO NR off for now, and consider trying other software for noise reduction (e.g. I have a license of DXO Optics Pro 9, but I need to update to get it to support the D5 I am sure). Other options include the Google Nik Collection which I have and I could try. Or just leave them without noise reduction, the D5 high ISO noise seems well behaved (as long as the algorithm is turned off!).
I am happy about the camera's very rapid response time. 12 fps is just totally ridiculous (if I turn it on, I seem to end up with a minimum of 3 frames most of the time even when I try to just capture one).
I single shot mode (which is what I'm more used to), the camera still feels faster and the AF is very sure footed. The build and ergonomics are a perfect fit for my hands and it doesn't seem that I want to pick up any of my other cameras for a while.