100% correct, but Shimano cassettes do not handle power well, ad they are short lived.
Been running those on my Canyon with a EP801 and 85nm tears them up 1500 miles ish, with dipping chain in wax every two rides. And 95% of the time, a second new chain will still hop on the cassette once it starts hopping which is end of life for all Shimano 12 sp cassettes. I only got 900 miles with manual shifting, electronic shifting upgraded life expectancy to the 1500. I few i got close to 1800 but most did not get that far if you ride hard. Buddy got 3000 miles but he is an ECO warrior.
Ive found the Sram to shift much cleaner under load, with electronic shifting compared to Shimanos electronic shifting.
Longevity im still working on. My first 1295 died at 600 miles after snapping a chain in race conditions, which bent a cog in the middle of the cassette, so a few gears never would shift right afterwards. Im over 1000 miles on my second cassette a 1275, and the chain needed replaced at 850 ish miles. Through the 35 dollar cheapy chain on and its been working good as the blk ones, and the cassette is shifting like new again. You could not do that with Shimano most of the time. On an Amflow? it would tear up the Shimano garbage quickly, I doubt you would get the same miles out of it, with the added power. Sram have a different tooth profile that does not hop like Shimanos do under load.