Sure, so Bitcoin is the only decentralised of the currencies, with over 10 000 nodes meaning the 21 million hard cap will always be enforced, the only way to mint it is to exhaust more and more electricity and with every halving and difficulty adjustment it maintains the need to expend more energy and labour to secure the network, the more work needed provides the floor for BTC no ones naturally going to work and provide resources at a loss
All the other currencies have no hard cap, they all have a higher inflation rate and will always be that way, these burns and all that are just covering up the fact that you cannot have a coin with the utility model without it being inflationary
The simplest way to look at the breakdown is to measure all other coins in satoshis, for example, ETH one of the oldest alt coins peak was 15 000 000 satoshis per ETH at its peak in June 2017 and its been on a downward trend like every other coin, it's worth exactly half that
Each halving cycle Bitcoin goes through it will continue to break away from these coins with an inferior monetary policy that cannot be enforced.
If you're measuring your gains in dollars, for example, 30% of that is just inflation as the US created that in the last 2 years so how much did you really gain in purchasing power?
Bitcoin is the only asset that outcompetes central banks balance sheets and on top of that has the liquidity to support those prices. Most of these alt coins you think the price is x, but its only a few 100 bucks buy order holding that price whereas with Bitcoins liquidity you can move in and out of a certain price range at several million dollars worth