@ColinTaylor, as usual, you're only reading, quoting, and responding to what you want.
Please don't
partially quote me or anyone else for that matter. Your interpretations are simply wrong.
These are the whole quotes, missing many parts you simply forget or ignore to take into account.
I didn't quote anyone. I paraphrased what I've read before (same as what RMerlin has posted in the quote below) and added my perspective to it too. While my paraphrasing wasn't as complete as it could have been (I can't remember responses, word-for-word), it was in the spirit of providing the best answer possible.
Something you're not even attempting to do here.
RMerlin:
Resetting to factory default after going from stock to Asuswrt-Merlin is not mandator. If coming from releases that are fairly close to one another then it's fine to keep your existing configuration. The firmware will even take care of adjusting the few rare cases where settings might be different (like SSH settings), with the exception of VPN-related settings. You will need to reconfigure your VPN settings if you were using them on stock.
However, I cannot guarantee the results of going from Asuswrt-Merlin to stock. Asuswrt-Merlin has code specifically designed to adjust relevant settings when first booted with stock settings, however stock firmware does not have such code when going the opposite direction.
L&LD:
@Amplifier, RMerlin himself has stated what I repeated in various posts throughout the forums.
In the quotes you provided, I read it as switching from Asus (originally Tomato based), to RMerlin. Reset needed.
Experience has borne that interpretation too as the best practice to a truly stable and performant network, long term.
If you read the entire posts and do not pick and choose which sentences or parts of sentences you focus on to criticize, there is no substantial difference.
I don't have the time when replying to each OP here to check if their stock firmware vs. RMerlin's was 'fairly close', at the time they upgraded (even if they would know, it's neither here nor there. One can't tell by mere version numbers if 'fairly close' was true for that specific firmware (s) or not). Nor do I need to know/ask if they're running VPNs either. I chose to answer with a slightly more general method that adds 10 to 15 minutes of time to do once, and correctly, but can save many hours and days of troubleshooting and log reading that in the end may not even help correct the issue at all. In other words, my intentions are to help beginners, at minimal cost in time and frustration.
And, that last sentence says it all from
my quote above. That last sentence isn't separate from the rest of my reply. It is an integral part of it.
Please try to see the forest and not merely the trees.