Let's face it, single-channel RAM options are beyond ridiculous for AMD or Intel laptops.
Maybe it would be a good idea to take step back and chill too: this debate is quickly approaching the edges of nonsense land.
Yes, it would be important for reviews to test dual channel Zen APU configs, and yes, it would be preferable that a good portion of laptop SKUs came with dual channel configs. However, attaching such an overly significant importance to dual channel configs while overlooking the utility of 1 channel for later (or low cost) upgrades and the far greater importance of overall build quality is nonsensical.
Some of the people on this thread should try an experiment: go through the paces of choosing a laptop as a moderate cost main machine with no dGPU, see how important the RAM config is on your component priority list (compared to display, cooling, storage options, keyboard, weight, autonomy) and see if you find a use for those 1 channel models that are easy to upgrade and end up cheaper (with dual channel RAM and a SSD of your choice) than the OEM version with more RAM and a TLC based SSD.
You want something to worry about? The new Zen APU better come with excellent power management that coupled with good design wins results in excellent stamina. It better come with units that are easy to service, with decent 1080p displays, high battery capacity, good keyboards and metal chassis options.
Stop projecting our enthusiast skewed views and our gamer habits in this discussion. It will be the Zen cores that sell the Zen APUs, not the Vega ones. Vega will only be the cherry on top and will indeed be ever so sweet in dual channel config.