No vintage LCD panels are immune, but it appears related most to climate and storage conditions (humidity, high seasonal temperature extremes and possibly gravity) causing the issue. For example, the issue appears to be more prevalent in humid countries, and if you import an item unaffected from such regions there is higher chance the delimitation of layers will occur more quickly in time. Panel type can also be a consideration - it appears less common in DSTN panels but high quality TFT displays have it occurring more often. Some very basic LCD panels do nothing.
Yes, I've seen the issue in Pismos (items sold in Japan), and vintage desktop LCD panels but not nearly as prevalent. Old desktop LCDs are much thicker, ?more glue and perhaps more immune to climate and storage conditions.
Vinegar syndrome is a bit of a misnomer, it's the glue degrading in one or more layers of the LCD panel which can sometimes give off a vinegar or chemical style odor, but in most there is no smell.