Well here is your confirmation.
But also why wouldn’t you believe the company that is manufacturing the device? You trust them enough to buy the device but you need extra confirmation for this one thing? That’s not logical at all
But also a basic understanding of physics should make this obvious. Yes the magnets on the connection are quite strong (and on a low friction surface you could still pull the laptop by the cable) but they are no where near as strong as a friction connection most importantly to lateral forces.
At a previous job where I had deal with some of this when dealing with the last gen Intel MacBooks (the ones with the Touch Bar and no MagSafe) we easily averaged about one broken port a month (and it was a small company) always caused by the same thing. Someone sat on, pushed or dropped their laptop on the side it was plugged in while it was charging.
If they were lucky it only broke off the connector in the port or only that port stopped working. At least half the time the twisting cracked the morherboard and destroyed the recharging circuit.
It’s your laptop do what you want but buy Apple care. There is a reason Apple brought MagSafe back. And it’s because of this exact issue and the number of repairs they had to do because of it.
Oh and do keep a backup. Because with the new MacBooks, if the charging circuit is broke, and the battery is dead, there is no way to power on the laptop. And unlike previous versions, the ssd is soldered into the motherboard. It is not removable so when you send your laptop in to get replaced, they will just replace the entire motherboard and all your files will not be transferred to your new laptop. I just went through this recently for a video issue, but I could at least power my laptop on and remove files