In fact one of them loses, the other doesn't.
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| Which capture ? |
My initial view was that Kf8 was no good : the White pawn promotes and the game is over.
That leaves Nxd7 or Qxd7.
If you think only in terms of immediate captures and exchanges, Black wins a pawn after either capture : Qxd7, Qxd7, Nxd7.
If exchanges are the intention it doesn't matter whether the Queen or knight captures : "same difference", so-to-speak.
However, look a little deeper than the focus of the pawn on d7, at more than just captures, and the difference between the two becomes more clear.
What does Nxd7 achieve ? What does it give up or stop doing ?
What does Qxd7 do ?
What response does White have to each of these moves ?
What are White's lines-of-attack ? Especially with the Rooks ?
Chess is so much more than an 'I take this, and he re-captures, and I take that, and he moves there' sort of game. Even simple positions will repay thought and should accumulate experience that can be re-used in different circumstances.
I made the correct move in this position, and for broadly, the correct theoretical reasons, but without seeing all the implications.

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