I'm more or less with you on this. The ability to virtualize x86 natively is huge for me. Not just for running popular x86 Linux distros that don't yet have an ARM port (looking at you, Ubuntu!), but also Windows, Windows Server, and even Intel versions of macOS. Being able to run VMs of Mojave and even as far back as Snow Leopard will be quite useful.
(NB: Ubuntu
Server for ARM has been available for a while. I don't know if that allows you to install the desktop packages - as you can with Intel server - but if you
can't it is probably because there is a shortage of desktop ARM systems to run it on... which ARM-based Macs will provide. Most of the desktop packages are already up and running on Debian/Raspbian and Apple actually
showed Debian being virtualized on Apple Silicon so no rocket science is involved...)
I think Apple's gamble is that,
by 2023, anybody in the "must have Parallels/Bootcamp" boat will be some sort of IT professional/developer who won't balk at having two computers in the house... There will probably be that one Intel Mac that hangs around in Apple's range for a few years (...like the "classic" 13" MacBook with spinning rust). Or, if you are a "serious" gamer, you should know by now that Apple hates you.
In terms of "consumer" need for running Windows - I think that's what has changed since the Intel transition in 2006: then, being able to run Windows was a real selling point for all those work apps, websites that only worked in Internet Explorer, banking, personal finance apps etc. Today, outside of the corporate world, "requires MS Windows" is already being supplanted by "Available for iOS and Android" so losing x86 support for Windows is more than outweighed by gaining support for iOS apps (and, potentially, native virtualization of Android... although that's partly CPU agnostic anyway) - and give it another couple of years that will be even more marked.
Even with "I need Windows for work" - give it a couple of years and - even if you have an x86 PC - your only option (because "data protection") will be to use virtual desktop to connect to your machine at work (or, most likely, your virtual PC in the cloud which your employer has outsourced to MS Azure). Yea, verily, even if the current policy is "instant dismissal if your data touches the cloud" that will have been turned inside out as soon as the PTB realise how much cheaper it is to have Microsoft or Amazon tick all of your compliance boxes for you (not that 'no cloud but you can walk around with the data on your PC' is rational to start with).
Anyway, on to new Apple range prediction and - if it hasn't been said already:
(
NB: - "AppleBook, iApple" etc. are just names I'm using to distinguish AS from Intel - I doubt they'll drop the "Mac" but they might change the "i" and "Book" bits)
Apple range by mid 2021:
13" AppleBook (AS - ultra thin)
14" AppleBook (AS +touchbar)
16" MacBook Pro (Intel - but only with the higher-end CPU/GPU options)
21" (or thereabouts) iApple (AS)
27" iMac (Intel - as announced)
Apple Mini (AS)
iMac Pro (Intel - no updates)
Mac Pro (Intel - maybe with minor bumps)
Mac Mini (buried in a link off the main Apple Mini page for developers needing to support x86)
...with each of the AS machines available in good/better/best configurations but
all running basically the same SoC with the lower-end options being underclocked and maybe having some CPU/GPU cores disabled (maybe justified by lower yields of fully functional chips, maybe not).
Apple range mid 2022 -:
Standard range - all with the same AS SoC:
13" AppleBook
14" AppleBook (+touchbar)
21" (or thereabouts) iApple
Apple Mini (AS)
Pro range - with new "workstation class" AS SoC:
16" AppleBook Pro (Apple Silicon Pro)
27" (or 30") iApple Pro (Apple Silicon Pro)
Apple Mini Pro (Apple Silicon Pro)
Legacy Range:
Mac Pro (Intel - entry level now 12 core but otherwise unchanged - Apple Mini Pro is faster)
Mac Mini (while sticks last - buried in a link off the main Apple Mini page for developers needing to support x86)
Note: no 12" MacBook because you don't want that, you want an iPad. Yes, you do. Look into my eyes (not around my eyes, into my eyes)
Tim says you want an iPad... but maybe the 2022 iPad Pro will support modern MacOS apps...