The base specification (IMAFDC) has little to no innovation, simply avoiding the mistakes of the past. We've got 60 years of experience with RISC-style instruction sets, so that's about consolidation not innovation.
However RISC-V is an excellent base upon which to innovate. You can see that in things such as the Vector extension, the memory model developed by industry and academic experts world-wide, and CHERI fine-grained memory-protection.
That's largely because if you base a product on Arm or MIPS you have the choice of getting them to actively invest in and support you, or getting sued into oblivion by them.
THAT is why RISC-V is the most friendly ISA to innovation and where most future innovation will happen. Because innovation comes not only from internally inside Intel or Arm or MIPS (who have switched to RISC-V now anyway) but from a myriad of possible sources.
However RISC-V is an excellent base upon which to innovate. You can see that in things such as the Vector extension, the memory model developed by industry and academic experts world-wide, and CHERI fine-grained memory-protection.