That may only happen with the Skylake GT4e.
Ofcourse the i5s, i3s and Pentiums won't have that iGPU. I was trying to explain that while SKylake i7 seems to be a terrible upgrade that doesn't justify the increased price Intel might have reached the point where their iGPUs now compete with a discrete GPU.
This is a big milestone because it should mean in 2018 i5 CPUs will have GPUs as good as discrete cards. If that progression keeps up then by 2020 pentiums will be as capable as the lowest end cards and that's a big revenue loss for AMD and Nvidia if they can't offer a similar product.
When skylake GT4e will be released next year, AMD and NVIDIA will have 16nm dGPUs, so the death of $150 dGPU is not going to happen. Not to mention that only Apple is using the Iris Pro so far.
That's not quite right. All the big laptop makers also use Iris Pro to some extent today but we're talking about desktops.
Five years is a long time. Maybe among desktop buyers Intel loses their appeal but that's unlikely. Anyone wanting to make a cheap gaming PC will be a lot more inclined to go Intel (compared to today's budget minded buyers) unless AMD and Nvidia can come out with their own competing cpu/gpu combos on a chip. Nvidia can't even if they build one based on ARM. AMD could but they are making 2 very big bets that we won't know the outcome of until 2 years from now.