Osram's H7 LED with German national approval in certain specific headlamps is old news...see
here. Even if we take the maker's hype at face value as written, the fact that a given bulb (such as one of these H7 LEDs) in a given headlamp (such as one of those on the magic list) might produce a beam pattern considered adequate/legal by a given country...none of that necessarily adds up to meaning the beam pattern is better than (or even as good as) the one produced with the halogen bulb the headlamp was designed to use.
Zooming-in closer on Osram's hype:
up to 220% more brightness compared to the minimum requirements of ECE R112
Whoopy-doo! The minimum requirements of R112 are pathetic. The main seeing points are (0.57D, 1.15R) and (0.86D, 1.72R) with a minimum of 10,100 candela; and (0.86D, V) minimum 5100 candela. A headlamp providing these levels of illumination could only be described with words like "feeble" and "inadequate". Multiply the values by 2.2 (Osram's "220%"...we're disregarding the
up-to weaselwords) and the result can be described as "less feeble" and "less inadequate", but pay careful attention here: they're saying this bulb gives performance up to 2.2x the minimum requirements in certain headlamps. Yeah? So? A plain old H7 halogen bulb can do that same exact trick.
up to 5 times longer lifespan compared to halogen lamps
We have to give them this point; it's a gimme.
and an additional 50% less glare.
An "additional 50% less glare" (what does that even mean?) less than...what? I guess that information is on a need-to-know basis.
As Debbie Harry (as "Blondie") sang in her 1981 smash hit "Rapture"*: Don't strain your brain! Just put in the 65w H7s and drive off with significantly better headlight performance and no real downsides or asterisks or cagey language.
*Now I'm really dating myself...