We're not talking about that. We're talking about pastes degrading in a few months, and needing reapplication (or a completely different paste).
Applying too much isn't going to affect this. It's going to get squeezed out anyway.
I already tested this on my GTX 1070, R9 290X and RTX 3090.
I yeeted the TFX and Kryonaut Extreme and MX-5 (MX-5 and Kryo Extreme tested on 290X and 1070 only) by intentionally applying "too much". There was no variance in longevity. This was easy to see with Kryonaut Extreme and MX-5, after some high temp torture testing (Intentional 95C on 290X) then back to normal temps to check for degradation.
In fact, on my last repaste on my 3090 FE, I intentionally yeeted the TFX by painting over the entire core (and a second thinner layer on the heatsink) instead of doing the X + dots method, and got the best results this way. Got this information from notebookreview (due to them fighting constant convex cores and imbalanced heatsinks, some very experienced people there).
(Some new updated paste results also. Kryonaut and Kryonaut Extreme are on a previous page with a different application).
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As far as 'Applying too much' and spreading: I was using the X pattern with dots with TFX until I read this:
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Now I just follow Seanwee's method.
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