With respect, you clearly don't wish to evaluate the information before you, and your arguments keep changing (and make no sense to the topic at hand). To be clear, again - WireGuard is not beta. It is production quality code in full mainline release. The underlying protocol is now well battle tested, independently audited, and has been at stable release for some time. Just because the Windows userspace application is labelled beta, doesn't make the underlying protocol beta.
Why do you seem to conflate the GUI on one OS with the underlying resilience and privacy credentials of the underlying protocol? WireGuard the app on Windows does not equal WireGuard the VPN protocol running underneath. Two entirely different things. You can just as easily run TunSafe (app) on Windows and still run WireGuard underneath - your argument is flawed.
The Noise Framework and Cha Poly are well established and secure, and they are de facto standards (ask Signal, WhatsApp, the EU, NATO, or any of the other bodies relying on them). With respect it seems like you don't know much about how it all works. Have you read the whitepaper? Read the code? The audits? Actually tested as I suggested? Jason, like many cryptographers, is exquisitely painstaking in his methodology and he is very slow to label things 'complete'. The Windows app is fine, and if you're worried, run it on Linux or OpenBSD (where it works much better anyway as it's native).
The VM issues are not 'real' they're imaginary. You were just a couple of posts ago beating the drum about their 'well documented' throttling of VPNs... When that was shown (like your other arguments) to hold no water, you ignore those parts of the reply, say nothing of the evidence and move on to another nit to pick. Whether VM - like most ISPs - has some local congestion or peering issues, is absolutely irrelevant to the topic at hand, which is VPNs. The fact one can replace an ISP router and get better features, more stable performance or whatever is hardly news, and certainly not VM specific. One thing it doesn't do, as you alluded, is increase the speed. I don't get 900Mbps over WireGuard because I run my own router, I get it because the gigabit service from VM is good and WireGuard is excellent.
if you have slow Internet, a low to mid tier home network, you have a specific need or choice for OpenVPN, or you just don't care, then pick what you like. That's fine and I've said that all along. Just please don't sling FUD when you have an apparent lack of understanding of the underlying code, principles and protocols at play. It'd be interesting to know which of the features of OpenVPN that you laud over WireGuard you actually use in your daily life? What's it offering that you need, that WireGuard isn't able to provide you personally?