Hoping that this time your review won't be as mediocre as before.
How about you mention in your full review that this laptop's fan configuration is not classic? The reason the laptop doesn't keep its PL2 for long enough compared to others and it doesn't even sustain its PL1 of 55W ( for the 11800H ) in Ultra performance profile ( perhaps i'm wrong, it might be 50W or 60W, not sure but you can confirm this in your full review ) is because of the fact that the fans "wait" after the cpu/gpu hit a certain temp, then, think of it as a countdown starts running and as soon as it hits 0, and assuming that the cpu is still over that certain temp, the fans will then start spinning faster and after a while they'll reach a particular speed. During this time where the fans start to slowly spin faster, the cpu will already be lowering its power draw to PL1 levels, which is as expected. Throttling will happen only if the cpu doesn't sustain PL1, and that's it. Ultrabookreviews has confirmed that the i7 11800H needs to pull ~90W to achieve its advertised 4.2Ghz on all 8 cores under 100% utilization, but the performance growth with power draw raise is not exactly linear for this 11th gen 45W Intel cpus ( even worse with ryzen 5000 mobile ), that's why you see diminishing returns. I'm not saying that this XPS should have higher power limits, but sure, if it would be able to at least sustain those 55W indefinitely with fans not making you deaf and its body temps not burning your skin, that would be nice.
Btw, it looks like with a -80mv or -100mv undervolt, 11800H pulls only ~80W to reach & sustain 4.2Ghz on all those 8 cores, just like ryzen 7 5800H does ( it needs to pull ~80W to reach 4.0Ghz on all of its 8 cores just as advertised ). Of course, this doesn't imply that both of them generate the same amount of heat just because they draw the same amount of power, but perhaps it is a worthy comparison?
People complain about XPS line's thermals but little do they know that they're made like that, their point is not to make the fans immediately spin faster as soon as the cpu/gpu get hotter. This behavior is the same as the one in Macbooks, but fortunately not as aggressive. To a lot of people with approach to thermal design is ideal.