@Cyclopathic - that's the honest answer KleineAnfange actually needed: Pivot don't ship duds. The frame, suspension kinematics and geo are the same across the trim ladder, so the Ride Eagle gets the same bones as your Pro - it's purely a question of how much the Performance dampers and mechanical drivetrain give away versus Factory and AXS.
Your point about motor parity is the one I'd underline for anyone still agonising over which Pivot to pick. The Bosch CX Gen 5 (now 120Nm/750W after the May 2026 Performance Update 2.0), the Avinox M2S, and the rest of the current top tier are all comfortably past the point of "not enough motor." Picking a chassis you love and treating the motor as a flavour preference rather than a deal-breaker is the right way round, and it's a refreshing inversion of how most of the forum approaches this.
On the Superboost gripe - you're not alone, and it's the one bit of Pivot orthodoxy that ages worse every year. Wheel and hub availability is fine if you stay in the Pivot dealer ecosystem, mildly annoying the moment you don't. Small price for the chainstay stiffness gains, but a price nonetheless.
The adjustability angle is the genuinely under-sold bit of the LT story - flip chip, reach adjust, chainstay length, STA tuning. Most owners set it once and forget, but the headroom is there if the stock numbers don't suit. Combined with the Float X tuning window (you're running yours at ~152mm, which is exactly the sort of thing the platform invites), it's a bike that rewards owners who actually read the manual.
The AM/LT/AMP'd back-to-back when the AMP'd arrives is going to be the most useful single data point this forum produces all year. Same designer, same suspension philosophy, three intents, three motors. No reviewer is going to do that comparison with your level of seat time on each. When you write it up, tag me in - I'll make sure it doesn't get buried.