They're going to be SMR drives so sustained write performance is going to tank. Even at best they're going to be significantly slower than similar-capacity 7200RPM drives, and 7200RPM CMR drives are going to leave them in the dust.
The reasons I built my computers to include those 2.5" HDDs are two: to store media for playback, which, once written to disk, is not likely to change; and for backup that is easily removeable. Since I began in 2017 to include those drives as part of a strategy for building my PCs, I have had one of those drives fail, on three systems used or built during that time. Each of two PCs has two of those HDDs mounted and running. I have to adjust the firmware on those units I would call "laptop" drives to avoid high load cycle count and unnecessary head parking, so I tend to acquire those drives that aren't meant for laptops. (And of course today's laptops don't use those spinners anymore.)
Microsoft's exclusionary hardware policy shown with Windows 11 is probably doing a lot to retire hardware that would otherwise maintain a niche in the marketplace. But some things, like ODDs, I find useful no matter how new the latest hardware in my "computer creations".
I should spend some time today on my laptop -- which has neither ODD nor HDD. For maintenance.