In two of your cases this operator is pretty shit because at some point you’ll probably want to offset the access (this isn’t a knock at you but at the feature).
This operator would only really be relevant to the last case which rarely comes up outside of infrastructure/library work (building a tool building tool) and usually those code bases are cautious to adopt new features too quickly anyways for portability.
I’ve done serious C++ work (not much in the past decade though) - while references are absolutely amazing and you essentially want to pass by const ref by default I think well written maintainable C++ should maybe have a dozen heap objects tops. C++ is a better language if you generally forget that pointers and bare arrays exist.
Just again - I think you’re right and the fact that your list is only three things long (and arguably two of them would be misuses) is a pretty clear sign that this is an incredibly niche feature.
I don’t think this operator is a real feature, tbh 😅
The fact that he claims it’s in C++ 29, while we are in 2024 is a good hint.
Or maybe he is a time traveler. Quick, go ask the next lottery numbers!