"One possible explanation for LPDDR5X VRAM is cost. "
The 256-bit, 256 GB/s, Strix Halo APU (4060 Laptop level of performance) uses LPDDR5X-8000, but problem is, LPDDR5X prices have quadrupled. Being 256-bit makes the Strix Halo APU quite expensive. Per pin / bit bus memory lane, LPDDR5X is much slower than GDDR7 and so a much wider and hence bigger GPU chip is required. RX 9060 XT has at 320 GB/s memory bandwidth already. A next-gen GPU, namely a 10060 XT, would have to be, say, (at least) 30% faster -> 320 GB/s * 1.3 = 416 GB/s. So the GPU chip would have to have a 416-bit memory bus width, or a multiple of 16-bit per LPDDR5X channel. 416-bit is actually divisible by 16-bit per channel (just a coincidence) = 26 channels. For comparison, a RTX 5090 has a 512-bit memory bus width.
And even if the 320 GB/s are correct, using LPDDR55X-8000 means still a 320-bit memory bus width chip. Such a chip is big and hence expensive. For comparison, a 9070 XT is a 256-bit chip.
A new rumour outlines alleged specifications, performance targets and pricing for AMD's next-generation RDNA 5-based Radeon RX 10000 series. It makes some interesting claims, such as the use of LPDDR5X memory modules on lower-end models.