And most will still buy Intel. Because the ratio of production of processors for desktops and laptops is 5:1 in favor of Intel. In fact, in reality, prices for AMD chips are no less at retail, given their real catastrophic shortage, as for laptops with new series. And so every year. As long as Intel has 70% of the market, as does Microsoft in the x86 OS market, they have nothing to worry about - they will simply force you to use their products if there is no real affordable alternative nearby.
AMD laptop chips still have their drawbacks. Let me remind you that high-end AMD motherboards cost 1.5 times more than approximately the same motherboards for Intel. As a result, even if you save on the processor, the amount of the processor and motherboard will be no less than the kit with Intel. Moreover, AMD still does not have a complete analogue of TB4 in chips, as well as support for DP2.0+, the full version, only the poor UHBR10 mode (40Gbps), while Intel declares support for UHBR20 in both the 13 and 14 series using 2 DDI channels, allowing you to connect 8K monitors. They still cannot be connected to AMD, except with professional boards. As well as not connecting to any discrete card, which deliberately, due to the fault of AMD/NVidia, slows down the progress in the mass appearance on the market of 8K monitor models with perfectly clear text and graphics like on smartphones with high ppi.