Wasn't trying to say you were wrong. Just not everything is your average gaming rig. And the stereotyped consumer shouldn't be the only focus, especially since the vast majority of them only use a phone for everything now anyway.
Hell, crypto-mining has proven that.
Oh, and sometimes, when things are standard issue they get used.
I mean yes, it just so happens that for the not average consumer/gaming rig you have to pay the premium of hedt sadly. Intel was king at this making sure simple-ish things like ECC never got any traction in the consumer market
Yeah, there's always a balancing act here, and Intel has historically skewed towards what I think is too restrictive overall - ECC is a good example of this. Still, it doesn't make sense to make MSDT platforms more expensive to accomodate tiny niche use cases that far less than 1% of users will ever touch, let alone have as a frequent task. That's what HEDT and entreprise platforms are for, after all - for those niche use cases.
Also, both Anandtech's and TPU's CPU benchmark suites go
far beyond what would be done on "your average gaming rig" or what "stereotyped consumers" would do, including scientific computation, simulation, modelling, complex rendering, AI/ML, and other heavy workstation tasks - hence why I used those as examples of even demanding tasks often not scaling well with memory bandwidth. One way of wording this that I've heard repeated quite a lot across both forums and high quality technical reporting: if you have a workload that benefits significantly from RAM bandwidth, chances are that you are very well aware of this.
There is absolutely an argument for "build it and they will come" in terms of features (high speed I/O is very much in that category - there are few applications that max out even PCIe 3.0x16, let alone 4.0 or 5.0; there are very few peripherals that make use of even 10Gbps USB, let alone 20 or 40, etc.), but that needs to be weighed against the realism of that potentiality as well as the cost of implementing it, and increasing MSDT RAM channel counts just doesn't pass any type of reasonable bar there. If reasonably-common tasks
could make better use of RAM bandwidth they likely already would (HEDT exists, after all, and has for a decade), and the added cost would be very significant, on top of motherboard prices having increased dramatically over the past few years.