Gasoline leaves deposits as it flows through the engine, especially on intake valves & injectors in port injected & carbureted engines, injectors on direct injected engines, combustion chambers in all engines as it burns.
Gasoline leave some minor deposits (oil leaves much more) after it burns out, not before. Engines get deposits primarily because they burn oil, it's not the gasoline. That is easily observed in 2-stroke engines. They have some deposits always on the crown of the piston and exhaust port, but never on the intake port and below the piston. Gasoline leave minor deposits only if stays too long in a container, gas tank, carburetor, etc. and degrades and evaporates - thats means at least a couple of years.
As far as I know is the opposite - in port injection gasoline cleans your intake valves and doesn't leave any deposits, including in carburetors. Only direct injection engines get deposits on their intake valves. That is why some modern DI engines like the Subaru/Toyota FA20 with D-4S direct injection has both combustion chamber injectors and port injectors. One of the purposes is the port injectors to keep the intake valves clean.
In short:
If your car has DI engine regardless of the gasoline you use (top or low tier) your intake valves will accumulate deposits over time because there is no gasoline going though them.
If your car has port injected engine (like most of the engines from the last 40 years) any gasoline (top or low tier) will keep your intake valves equally clean because the gasoline goes through them daily and clean them.