Why they are scarce:
A single-ended output stage must also be class A. Theoretically, the average current through a class A stage is equal to its idle current (distortion can cause the max signal average current to be higher than the idle current, but it won't be a large percentage higher). If average current (during driven conditions) equals idle current, a resistor can be inserted in that current path to create a constant voltage drop, which can then be used to create a steady bias voltage. The cost is 1 resistor. A fixed-bias supply could also be used to provide a steady bias voltage, but at the expense of many more parts.
And a fixed-bias supply lacks the inherent self-limiting feature of a cathode resistor: If tube current tends to runaway and become excessive, the resistor will drop more voltage, increasing the bias voltage, which reduces the tube current. So a cathode resistor will keep your tube from burning itself or a transformer up, while a fixed bias supply has no such limiting feature (without adding yet more parts), so a simple fixed-bias supply will cheerfully let you tube take out a transformer.
So the cheapest, simplest solution of a self-bias cathode resistor is also the best option unless there are additional functions the current-limiting fixed bias supply must accomplish (you might see that in some very modern circuits, but then again they tend to go for more output power and less distortion, so use something other than single-ended operation).