It wouldn't be anywhere near $1,000, that is the point.
Though I don't really want 4 more cores, I'd prefer 2 more cores, and 8 more PCI-E lanes.
This is the issue. And unlike the gentleman from earlier, I will not resort to calling you a half-retard even though I disagree with your views, because we are all civilized around here and are entitled to our own opinions.
It was clearly a gamble, in some respects, for Intel to make the entry HEDT SKU a hex-core. On one side, a reasonable consumer might welcome it as a long-anticipated update to the HEDT lineup, at a reasonable price of ~$380, same as the quad-core 4820K. On the other hand, others will (without having any intention of buying X99) look at the 5820K and ask Intel / complain to other people that the 4790K should have been hex-core too.
Seriously?
If the 6700K was a hex-core with no iGPU, why would the 5820K and 5930K even exist? For the sole purpose of offering more PCIe lanes? Quad-channel DDR4 (oh look, double the bandwidth, must be double the FPS too)? Intel would be shooting itself in the foot.
1. Extra costs into the 6700K. Can't take a Xeon die like the 5820K and 5930K because it's not LGA2011. Need to make a new hex-core die on LGA1151. In the end, no one ends up buying it because the extra R&D costs warrant a higher price tag, and everyone says "DX12 is coming, FX-8350 offers similar performance for about 1/2 the price". Lost lots of money here.
2. 5820K and its successor just die. I mean, what else are these two supposed to do (in addition to the 5930K, also dead)? Next, people boycott LGA2011 and say that "unless the 5960X's successor is a 10-core, I won't buy anything 2011". Jesus. So what is Intel supposed to do now? Lost more money here.
3. Intel slips back into the Pentium days and becomes no better than AMD. These few years have been about forcing the TDP down (don't look at the 6700K, look at the fact that Broadwell desktop was 65W and the other Skylake SKUs are of lower TDP than Haswell). Six-core would mean 140W on LGA1151. There aren't any stock coolers on LGA2011 because none of Intel's stock coolers (except for that one oddity during the Westmere era that was a tower) can handle that kind of heat output. 140W? Better get better VRMs, because those H81M-P33 MOSFETs aren't going to take on a six-core. And "hey look, AMD actually has stock coolers that can handle their CPUs". Lots of confusion and more money lost.
4. What happens to the other LGA1151 SKUs? Did they suddenly cease to exist? 28 PCIe lanes for the 6700K and...what? Would you want to try and explain this disjointed lineup to anyone? "Oh yeah, the top dog in the LGA1151 family is really, really powerful, but although the rest are all 6th Gen Core, they all suck in comparison."
"Intel deserves this dilemma because they cheated by winning over the OEMs anticompetitively" is not a valid argument in this scenario. Those were pre-Netburst eradication days. Prior to Carrizo, there were plenty of opportunities for AMD in the OEM laptop and desktop market, since Trinity/Richland and to a lesser extent, Kaveri APUs offered much more to the average user than a i3/i5.