, selection is indeed a lot bigger with Intel. To be frank, I don't think Ryzen 1500u and 2500u / 2700u would have been worth it for most people since at that time OEMs messed up lots of things cooling & driver related.
Nowadays with 3500u / 3700u (Picasso), things are a lot better. Battery life is better, not as much vulnerabilities as Intel chips (=faster long term / real world performance), more dual ram options, drivers can be downloaded from AMD's site too etc. The chips being slightly more efficient which also gives better performance (also because it is harder for OEMs to mess up things). Even Thinkpads T series now also have Ryzen options (that says something about Lenovo taking AMD apu's serious). According to rumors, even Surface (1 or perhaps more) will get a Ryzen option.
The only thing I am still in doubt about is if OEMs can make the 3700u worth it compared to the 3500u (mainly vega 10 vs vega 8), with previous generations they faced similar problems as Intel i5u vs i7u where i7u was practically as fast as the i5u in many laptops while being substantially more expensive. Preferably, cooling solutions & available power would have to be improved with the Ryzen 3700u chips to make the most out of vega 10.