For me personally it's almost always a laptop with strong CPU but with only iGPU. Then I use eGPU, as dGPUs in laptops are always nerfed in VRAM size and some get inadequate to do the work even after one year. The 2022 Legion 5 Pro with the 6 GB 3060 is one example; it is basically useless now in 2023 when 6.7 GB is the minimum needed VRAM for many apps (and games at 1440p, not even at 4K). So the next step up is 8 GB dGPU but is that going to be enough in 2024 or 2025? Time will tell.
So iGPU + eGPU for me. That way I simply slide my Core X out, pop a new GPU in and plug it back to my laptop, problem solved. Another benefit is that they share memory together, so let's say they get up to 8 GB shared for iGPU + 16 GB dedicated VRAM with GPU in an eGPU setup and you get effective and usable 24 GB of (V)RAM. Pretty much all games are perfectly playable at 70-120 fps in ultra/maxed details at 1440p native (so no FSR/DLSS) so that's another benefit because to get such experience with a gaming laptop you need to pay a pretty damn high price these days and you will probably still have less VRAM for work and your laptop won't be thin, light, and with good battery. If you want to game on the go - grab a Steam Deck, it will still be significantly cheaper than getting a (gaming) laptop with 12+ GB VRAM dGPU and you will get longer battery life.
Long story short, this is looking great and very promising here for Intel's upcoming iGPU(s?). But it's an "i7" variant here so I wonder how is their "i5" version going to perform; if they get it anywhere near AMD's 680M (but stronger than the 660M) that will be awesome 🤞