@c_chep@jon Yes and yes (it seems) :/
A lot of the problem stems from the fact that benchmarks optimise for single stream TCP throughput. And a good way to get a really good score on such a benchmark is to add heaps of buffers everywhere. Which sucks for literally everything else. Yet this is what is still routinely done, even with 5g equipment.
One of the 5G buzzwords is (ostensibly) latency, so at least that has made the industry start paying attention to it as a concept. But I've still seen benchmarks of 5G equipment with seconds of buffering built-in, so it seems more like it'll be yet another benchmark to game: ultra low latency as long as the link is idle, but still bufferbloat out the wazzoo as soon as you run any real traffic on it.
Even my (allegedly) high-class business grade gigabit fibre connection has 30-40 ms of bufferbloat one hop away from me if I don't apply my own traffic shaper. It's infuriating :/