Yes, definitely understand. Also, I wasn’t saying KeePassXC is above and beyond Bitwarden in every way, let alone the BW desktop application, just that everything in the program is so well and carefully executed, including the clipboard function. See this post for example to see how KPXC does it:
I use both BW and KPXC. Both wonderful products. By the way, if you want to store your KPXC in a cloud account for backup purposes, you can jack up the Argon settings as high as you like while keeping your local copy more moderate. You can also store your key file away from the cloud KeePass database you’ve backed up. Also can select 1 of 3 powerful 256-bit ciphers perfectly implemented using the Botan 3.3.0 cryptographic libraries.
That’s an example of love and care. Totally unnecessary to supprt anything beyond AES-256, but KeePass does it anyway. Same as the clipboard functionality above where KPXC figured out how to avoid the standard clipboard in KDE.
KPXC also has special memory protection not afforded by the BW desktop app.
Just to give a few examples.
Ultimately if you need the extra functionality of Bitwarden, KeePass is not suitable, but it’s a really well done application for what it is, and BW devs can learn some things from it.