I'd strongly suggest testing in 110/115/120V (any of these) conditions too, millions of people of all socioeconomic classes still are under this regime, it's also more stressful for the PSU
This isn't even a matter of socioeconomic conditions, it's just how the global power distribution works, and largely inherited from the grid's earlier development stages and power generation challenges. I've brought this up before, and I hope it's accounted for by the new PSU reviewer that W1zz ends up hiring.
230 V-only reviews are pretty much worthless to anyone who lives in an area with a 120 V or similar residential grid. Mains voltage affects a power supply's conversion efficiency and effective capacity. This conversion efficiency rate can swing as much as 10% depending on the topology, components and project of the power supply unit. Furthermore, high capacity units are often derated when operating in low voltage mains, something that is not always clearly communicated by manufacturers and reviewers alike.
It's a particularly egregious problem in Japan, theirs is a special case since their grid runs at the lowest voltage in the world - only 100 V, further split into 50 and 60 Hz regions (if I recall correctly East Japan operates in 50 Hz, while West Japan operates in 60 Hz), it's another dynamic altogether. The derate issue I mentioned earlier, let's take as an example the 1600 W Corsair AX1600i, arguably the most technologically advanced and efficient power supply in the market today - it will output only 1300 W (possibly less, 1300 W is its official derate) when operating plugged into a Japanese 100 V outlet.
Some older Japanese electronics require a step down transformer to run at the intended 100 V input even if you have 120 V mains, at 127 V here i'm already 27% above the expected input for those devices and it
really makes them malfunction over time. Meanwhile, EU power is 230 V/50 Hz, largely incompatible with the rest of the world, unless your region uses European power standards.
Very useful article:
en.wikipedia.org