Way to miss the point.
We're looking for APUs without dGPUs for the last three pages and that's all you quote out of context? Context like the next entire paragraph of my post you just quoted.
Jesus.
I don't know about other regions, but these have been widely available in the U.S. for a few months now. A friend got his from Micro Center; I got mine from Amazon. It's an awesome laptop. The 6800H iGPU + 16GB LPDDR5-6400 performance is noticeably behind 6900HS iGPU + 16GB DDR5-4800, but most games are playable at 1080p on business trips.
The problem with AMD is that they don't offer nearly the level of OEM support that Intel does. Case in point, the two USB-C ports on my 6800H Zenbook 14 Flip OLED have PCIe tunneling hardware and are technically USB4. However, AMD USB4 drivers for the integrated chipset still have all kinds of issues. Worse yet, AMD does not offer nearly the kind of support Intel does for OEMs on resolving these issues, so AMD driver issues in practice don't get resolved in a timely manner. In the end, ASUS is forced simply to advertises the USB-C ports on the Zenbook as 3.2, even though they are hardware USB4. You in turn get flip-flopping firmware updates which frustrate users.
If this was Intel, they would have entire OEM support teams helping ASUS get the software to work on the ASUS hardware, updating Intel drivers based on the interaction to get the job done as necessary, but to AMD, "it's just one laptop model." A lot of the time the trouble with buying an AMD laptop is that you get significantly worse software/firmware/driver support from the OEMs, which is a direct consequence of the OEMs getting significantly worse software help from AMD. Until AMD improves their OEM support, it will be extremely difficult for AMD to make big gains on laptop market share, even if they manage to release a killer product.
There is only so much headache most users will put up with for the performance increase of going from Iris Xe to 780M. For most users, having a laptop that "just works" is their top priority. If AMD laptops continue to be as much of a headache as Intel ARC-equipped laptops, then the audience will continue to be limited to the select few highly headache-resistant.