Unfortunately all of these anecdotal experiences are pretty arbitrary. Your phone habits are likely unique to you and result in a different battery usage than that of others.
A slightly more meaningful comparison is how the phone performs when compared to similar phones when used by the same person with the same overall workflow.
In my own case, my previous P20 Pro and P30 Pro phones were slightly smaller in battery capacity but similar in overall CPU and memory performance. The displays were quite different however (OLED vs AMOLED, and 60Hz vs 90Hz), and were generally much brighter on the older phones. Neither models supported 5G. The older phones were Android 10 as well, and Huawei is known for its aggressive power management, often killing apps shortly after losing focus.
My current workflow is more minimalist than ever before, yet battery consumption has been quite a bit higher with the Pixel 7, regardless of whether it's stock Android or GOS (with and without Play Services).
I would typically go to bed with 60%+ battery remaining (and this with two and three year old phones), but I am now consistently ending the day with around 35-50%.
I can only surmise it is due to the differences in OEM Android optimizations, the display panel, and/or the modem, but obviously I can't make any meaningful comparisons due to the variation of hardware.
Thankfully, I'm not needing to reach for a charge cable before the end of the day or anything. I could probably recoup some of the increased battery loss by simply disabling the 90Hz refresh rate. Setting the preferred network type hasn't had a noticeable effect though, but that may be due to using a carrier which only supports 3G/LTE anyway.