It also depends on the price you have to pay per socket: if then 500€ worth is wasted in the wall behind the end devices, I would only take the number I need and simply plug the rest into the extension cord for 20€.
If there is enough space in the lowboard or similar, in my opinion it is even almost easier to connect everything with a large multi-socket power strip.
I have a large switchable power outlet. I get along great with it for TV, PlayStation, receiver, TV stick
That's how we do it too. However, we made sure that the 2 sockets have a separate fuse. Just connecting 8 devices to one socket without more is probably not such a good idea. I don't remember why right now.
For example, a 75 inch TV consumes between 150-250 watts depending on the model. Depending on the power strip, you can operate 8-12 TVs with it (usually the strips are designed for 2000-2500 watts). You just shouldn't necessarily take the cheapest one from the hardware store.
The power strip is probably not the bottleneck, but rather if a few power hogs are connected to the same circuit (?) along with the heavily loaded socket. That is why there is a separate fuse.
If, besides the TV, receiver, DVD, possibly a sound system and 2 consoles on a power strip, there are still 2 notebooks, a few lamps, and other things connected to additional sockets belonging to the same circuit.
At least that is how it was explained to us.