5-year old(ish) Motorola One and other than wishing my battery drained slower, no complaints but I appreciate it more every time I hear how much people spend (or are manipulated into spending via financing) on the flagship phones
Note: it still gets about 6 hours under load so the battery thing isn't that big of a deal
"just as good"? No, I feel it is (and has been for years) vastly superior but I mostly use it to find documentation or Stack Overflow answers so consistent UI and concise summaries are high priority to me. Take that as you will
I don't think anybody can dethrone Google Maps yet but that's another story
The challenge isn't finding counter examples, it's limiting the narrative of history to have a simple "good/bad divide" but here are some selections of underdogs one may consider the greater of two evils:
The confederacy (US Civil War)
Caesar's army crossing the Rubicon
Imperial Japan post Pearl Harbor
Pakistan's complicated history with India
King Leonidas and his men (Persia was arguably more equitable)
Austria-Hungary (WW1)
Fascist Italy (WW2)
As for David and Goliath, keep in mind David was using a sling, a weapon that can hit with the same force as a modern revolver when used properly. It's entirely possible that story is an allegory and/or propaganda of the value of properly equipping one's armies; it probably shouldn't be viewed as anymore impressive than a rampage killer fatally wounding somebody twice their size
The Switch was an iterative improvement on the Wii U and while I wish they called it Nintendo Snap (how I heard the new sound effect) instead of drab numbering, I'd argue there are similar iterative innovations here--some likely to compete with the Steam Deck--without losing what's working so far
Glad to see Blur blurring the line