That's pretty good analysis IDC,it looks like VID variation is what is producing all those different power draw numbers in various reviews(a lot of reviewers use p95 these days,not as taxing as linpack but close).
If you are lucky enough than this CPU should be a great OCer,albeit with huge power draw. I look forward to your other results,good work.
Two things struck me when I was delving into this - the first is exactly as you say, spot on, the natural VID variation across samples is likely playing a large role in the variation of power-consumption numbers across the various reviews, and second was that even without the VID variation, the variation in "stock" LLC settings from mobo to mobo (and even from bios rev to bios rev for a given mobo make & model) is driving a Vdroop variability from review to review.
For example when I reduced my LLC setting from "High" to "Med", that alone reduced the Vcore at load by some 0.04V and power by nearly 30W...all because Vdroop increased.
Less expensive mobos are probably going to have higher Vdroop, it costs money to install all the components needed to stabilize voltages. My crosshair V formula-Z cost me $230, that is $30 more expensive than the FX-8350 I bought to go in it!

But consider what I'd get if I had bought an $80 AM3+ combo board? I bet Vdroop is rather large with that tier of mobos, and power-consumption will be quite lower as Vdroop is effectively a way to unwittingly undervolt your chip...and undervolting will always lower power-consumption and operating temperatures.
And as we saw at the beginning of this thread, if people are solely relying on software reporting their Vcore after Vdroop is factored in then (versus physically measuring it) then they are probably blind to just how big (or small) their actual Vdroop is.
My power consumption climbed because my motherboard was doing a good job eliminating the Vdroop and driving the loading voltage to the spec'ed VID. If I had a less expensive board then I probably would have never seen the power consumption get as high as it did at "stock" settings.
And that might explain why I can considerably undervolt my FX-8350 from its stock VID. Maybe AMD spec'ed the stock VID so high because they are trying to build in overhead in terms of Vcore such that their chips will still be stable once the reality of Vdroop on cheaper AM3+ mobos is factored in...all while knowing the lower Vcore will result in the FX-8350 coming in under the TDP spec.
And it only becomes a problem when an enthusiast plugs the chip into a mobo that has expensive LLC components that can eliminate Vdroop at stock, driving Vcore to VID and pushing power usage well above TDP. For those few individuals who do that, AMD is probably thinking those individuals don't care about power usage at stock settings anyways. A "no harm no foul" scenario.
Because lets be real, I didn't buy a $230 mobo for my $200 cpu just to run that cpu at stock

Who would?