I think that you are much more advanced than we are on this topic but as usual, we like to study the details to death before jumping. Often we find bugs that the vendor forgot to discover or document. This has been our experience with ST, Cypress, Silabs, Efinix, Gowin, Lattice and others.
The support from Efinix has been great. Sharing a contact name (hope she does not mind):
rochellez[at]efinixinc.com
Rochelle Zhang created many of the tutorial videos you see on their website. She is a good contact at the USA office.
We had a rough start (as usual) with the Ti60 kit. Be very careful with the voltage rails deployed by this kit. IMHO, the use of potentiometers to adjust the very critical CPU and LCD backlight (IP7P) rails is just wrong. In our first purchase of this kit, the kit failed after 15 mins of use. Factory was mystified and we both thought the Ti60 was nuked. We have a $25k USD BGA rework station so felt comfortable in repairing the unit. Efinix support was amazing and they sampled us a few Ti60 FPGA devices. Before starting the surgery, decided to deploy the IP alternate ports. In summary, we found out that the SAMTEC high speed connectors had failed. Ordered a fresh batch from Digikey and the kit worked once again.
During one of tests, the backlight voltage went beyond spec - not sure how but the LCD was killed. Had to order a replacement from Amazon to be operational once again. This rail is controlled by a pot - for no reason. As the max voltage is known - why not fix the voltage???
Would love to continue to receive your feedback on this topic as we still learning the fine details on how to deploy this IP. Presently testing the Ambiq and soon the STM32U5 micros which have a hard MIPI DSI port. The GUI tools to create animation for the target display panel is $5k++ USD if using Ambiq. Free if using STM32U5 with the (still buggy?) TouchGFX toolchain.
In the long run, we DO want to work with MIPI DSI and 4 lanes so FPGA is definitely on our roadmap. We are also experimenting with Gowin who was amazing for their tech support but after raising the bug report of their HyperRam IP - they are now in the witness protection program. Zero support from factory. So tired of lack of support from vendors who only want to sell containers of their buggy silicon. Have had this treatment for the past 37++ years of design engineering. If their encrypted crapware does not work as advertised, they can keep it.
BTW: The Ti60 to IP7P connector pinout is with a double negative in the pinout layout - just a FYI. That is, they made this error twice so it does work out of the box but do compare against the IP7P Foxconn logic board schematic. When if required, can post more details. Best to remain with the pinout used by Apple / Foxconn for a sanity check.