I'm not disputing that almost any engine can be broken in on synthetic oil. I'm fond of short bursts of heavy load for "running in" most components.
Page 54 here.
In that case the process is not so much breaking in the mechanical parts, but the distribution of the fancy grease within the high speed bearing that is absolutely necessary to keep heat generation remarkably low during operation. Running a brand new truly high speed grease lubed spindle without proper run in will trigger thermal runaway that can turn the bearings into stinking junk in less than a minute. But after run in the housing may never be more than barely warm to the touch.
I would have been interested in your cylinder walls' surface finish, roundness and taper
Iron non-faced rings are notoriously easy to "break in".
I'm thinking your engine's ring combo may be relatively more likely to seat well than some others. Speed Pro and TRW used to say the thin rails of iron exposed on most moly faced rings would ensure their quick seating. And that the rings were lapped during mfg to be pre-broken in, (visible on a new ring). Sounds like it is the cylinder that "breaks in" after all. Since Mahle bought them all up the tech info is getting danged hard to find. I'm quite nervous.
Here's some semi-vintage ring tech stuff with numbers.
"Hone to finish size with 280 or 400 grit stones. When using an automatic hone such as the CK-10, rough sizing is done with 70 grit stones to within .003" of finished size. intermediate hone with 220 grit stones to within .0005" and finish to size with 280 or 400 grit stones.400 and 600 grit stones are available for both hand operated and automatic equipment, with the 400 grit working out
quite well when a smoother surface is desired. The 600 grit produces a very high polish which is the maximum
smoothness in cylinder wall finishing. Honing with the 600 grit becomes more critical due to the tendency to burnish
and pick up scratches - more prevalent as the surface smoothes out and the crosshatch pattern begins to disappear.
A highly burnished surface can be detrimental, resulting in non-uniform oil film distribution and slow
ring seating due to the slick surface.
Some people have the idea that a given manufacturer's No.500 stone is also 500 grit. Although it is true "the higher the number, the finer the grit”, No. 500 is actually 280 grit, 300 is 220 grit, 200 is 150 grit and 100 is 70 grit. A good honing stone to use is a 280 grit for chrome top rings and 280 or 400 grit for moly top rings. If you are using hand operated equipment, the drill speed should be between 200 to 450 R.P.M. Saturate each cylinder wall and the honing stones with a good grade of honing oil. Kerosene, mineral spirits or a light bodied mineral oil can be used.