Nothing, and I mean... Absolutely nothing, will be better than finding King Tuts tomb. Sorry dude... Your trinket finds are interesting, but underwhelming.
Actually, the discovery and study and understanding of many very large ultra-high precision boxes and hundreds of ultra high precision vases are developments that are more important than King Tut. They allude to capabilities that can’t be understood nor explained.
The crafting of stone to precision almost unobtainable today, the crafting of stone megaliths of huge proportions, the obvious use of unknown tools are all ignorede. That attitude is present here as well as the professional academic archeologist community.
To your point, nothing can compare to the discovery of Tut’s tomb. It was truly unique. I have never been to Egypt, and I don’t think I ever will, but in the 1970s I was fortunate to see the “Treasures of King Tut” exhibit in Chicago- twice. It seemed like almost everything in his tomb was on display- even the gold mask. Standing within 10 feet of something I’ve seen as a little boy- one of the high points in my life. The gold dagger, and the iron dagger which was found out years later to be made from a meteorite, all the funerary items,and on and on.
It was magnificent. The ancient Egyptians were master artists and builders.
Modern day grave robber fails at notoriety again.