There really is no right or wrong answer. It depends on your riding and environment.
Oddly, I'm going back to 3x8 due to a change of location; steep hilly. Slap it in the granny going up,
slap it in the middle ring on the flat, slap it in the big ring going down. I am a fan of the 1 x 9 set-up
when in deep winter and feeling fat and unfit.
Other notes, best use meters development to get a proper perspective of gears. In a 3x X set-up there
is "redundancy", but the "redundancy" actually helps in not making too many front shifts.
For years and years Shimano never got the ratios right to make even jumps (ie. a linear meters development), SRAM always
had better ratios. In a 1x X set-up bear in mind the chain-line can be extreme - chain wear and chain-ring
wear are accelerated.
Oddly, I'm going back to 3x8 due to a change of location; steep hilly. Slap it in the granny going up,
slap it in the middle ring on the flat, slap it in the big ring going down. I am a fan of the 1 x 9 set-up
when in deep winter and feeling fat and unfit.
Other notes, best use meters development to get a proper perspective of gears. In a 3x X set-up there
is "redundancy", but the "redundancy" actually helps in not making too many front shifts.
For years and years Shimano never got the ratios right to make even jumps (ie. a linear meters development), SRAM always
had better ratios. In a 1x X set-up bear in mind the chain-line can be extreme - chain wear and chain-ring
wear are accelerated.