A couple days ago I asked you why you think red dot sights and holographics are still faster on target than even the best of LPVOs on 1x.
https://darklordofoptics.locals.com/post/3835843/why-faster
I got a good range of answers that covered all the important stuff really well.
The biggest reason, unsurprisingly, is due to the more flexible eye relief.
With LPVOs, although the exit pupil on 1x is usually fairly large (8 to 12mm on most high quality LPVOs, you are still more restricted in terms of eye position.
However, with people who train, the speed differences when doing drills is truly miniscule and gets smaller the more you practice. Some SOF people did pretty good comparative testing and for them (this was primarily Razor Gen2 vs Aimpoint), there was really no speed difference when doing drills. Their presentation consistency became so good that the optic differences were a wash.
For those of who do not train quite as much (and that's pretty much all of us), eye positioning does make a difference albeit a relatively small one.
The speed difference is most pronounced at closer distances where the eye positioning advantage of red dots and holographics is combined with the perspective difference that ( @TheMarksman correctly called this one out) is only apparent at across the room distances. When using a red dot or holographic, you see everything from the perspective of where your eye is located. With a riflescope, you see everything from a perspective of where the objective of the riflescope is located. That translates into a slight perception dissonance between the two eyes. Having the adjustments of the scope significantly off center adds to that. As distances increase, the perspective difference quickly becomes unnoticeable.
Lastly, there is the matter of distortion. In nearly every riflescope, on 1x, there is a slight amount of distortion on the edges. The same goes for many red dot sights since you are looking through a curved window pane. Holographics, however, have no perceptible distortion. That's why for most people, Vortex UH-1 or EOTech will be slightly faster than even high quality red dot sight, both being closely followed by high quality LPVOs.
An interesting quirk here is a comparatively uncommmon red dot sight design that is used by Meprolight (Foresight and RDS) and, I think Hartmann (both Israeli products). Rather than have you look through a curved window like you do with all conventional red dots sights, they keep all the powered optics in the base of the body of the sight. The aiming pattern is projected up, where it is reflected toward your eye by a flat optical piece coated to work as a dichroic mirror. The view is in many ways very similar to holographics: completely undistorted. That would make for an interesting experiment.
For me personally, these small speed differences do not influence my purchasing decisions. Other things are more important.