The point being, broadly, that they haven't been problematic for the vast majority of applications in which they were fitted over that 30 year period, which underscores it being an implementation problem not a technology problem.
We have more than just low tension rings going on now. We have super short pistons with the rings pushed up toward the crown to minimize swept ring area, we have ultra thin oils that are more prone to coking, and these oils are getting into a ring pack that is much hotter, due to it being pushed up, which drives up the propensity to develop deposits.
Low tension rings entered the picture in the 80's as part of the pursuit of improved fuel economy and reduced bore wear. They became more common through the 90's as the focus on fuel economy increased. Ford's Windsor engines got them in the late 80's/early 90's, the modern HEMI has them (as did the Modular and later Coyote engines). None of these engine families is known for considerable oil consumption, but none of them spec 0W-8. The 5.7L HEMI does have the rings pushed up further toward the crown:
View attachment 272280
When compared to a 4.6L Modular:
View attachment 272281
But there's still some decent spacing on the ring pack, and the oil control ring area is relatively wide.
Here are some Toyota A25A pistons:
View attachment 272282
View attachment 272283
View attachment 272284
Now, these are tiny pistons, but notice the ring pack is much tighter (but a decent crown gap) with the oil control rings being TINY and packed close to the 2nd compression ring, unlike the HEMI or Modular. And of course they are caked up.
That tight, small oil control ring design, in a short piston, with a short, hot running top, is just asking for coking, which is exactly what we see.