Too many variables are involved, and it really hinges on how the engine is used. If the oil is getting a lot hotter, and the engine is being lugged down with high loads at low RPM then a thicker oil (based on the science of Tribology) will indeed give more engine protection headroom. What it boils down to is the fact that thicker oil (more HTHS) under the same operating conditions will give larger film thickness between moving parts, and therefore more wear protection. I care less about what other use (even though I post about why viscosity might matter), but I always bump up from a recommended xW-20 to a 5W-30. No engine specifying a xW-20 is going to suffer any consequences whatsoever from using a 5W-30 ... except maybe 0.01 MPG less fuel mileage. Not worth it to me to sacrifice more engine protection for a tiny sliver of fuel mileage that would be negated for the whole tank of gas by one high throttle row through the gears from a stop light, lol.Only thing being avoided is the actual facts that I asked about proof on the 3.6 pentastar having additional wear from off-roading and rock crawling running 0w20. Was any actual tests done where two 3.6 pentastar’s were run through the same conditions one with a 20wt the other 30wt then torn apart for examination? Or is this simply yet another hijacked thread to start a thick thin debate?
If you were using your engine hard, would you rather possibly be on the edge of losing full protection if you got into a surprise severe driving condition, or would you rather have some protection headroom and insurance? That's basically why people will run one viscosity grade higher than what the auto makers recommendation which is primarily driven by CAFE to sacrifice some possible engine wear for a small gain in fuel mileage.