Hi Telmo!
I thank you for your answer , that is perfect for introduce the discussion
Of course , there is no problem with variations that lead to flat positions , but they are not the most interesting
With critical lines , various criteria are in conflict , and that lead to interesting problems: some examples:
2 Knights Defence 1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bc4 Nf6 4 Ng5 d5 5 exd5
Theory assessment is that chances are equal ( maybe slightly better for Black) after 5...Na5 , 5...Nd4 , or 5...b5
But most engines chose 5...Nxd5 , so between engines the% of white wins is abnormmally high
Leningrad Nimzo 1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 e6 3 Nc3 Bb4 4 Bg5 h6 5 Bh4 c5 6 d5
There are a lot of "theoretical" moves , but most engines chose
6...Nxd5?! 7 Bxd8 Nxc3 8 Qb3 Ne4+ 9 Kd1 Nxf2+ 10 Kc1 (or Kc2) followed by Nxh1 ; unfortunately , after 10...Kxd8 11 Qg3 Nxh1 12 Qxg7 Re8 13 g4 , white wins (this refutation is quite different of the lines in ECO)
Latvian Gambit : this is the contrary of previous examples :
the line is given as winning for white , but with best play on both sides , there is a forced draw, but there are a lot of difficult moves to find for both sides
the analysis is rather long , and I am 78 , so I shall give you in my next post