CRS points need to be verified manually by the processing agent. The more points one claimed, chances are the more items the agent would need to go through, check, and verify.
It is not the number of travel records that matters. It is where one traveled. E.g., did you go often to EU countries vs. ISIS-plagued countries.
Most importantly, it depends on the supporting documents. How compliant to IRCC's specifications is the work reference letter? Does it cover all the points IRCC asks for? How straightforward is it to verify the proof of funds document? Things like that. To make a sweeping generalization without considering all these factors is nothing but irresponsible and unwise.
And then of course there is a bit of luck. Did your file get placed to an office with lots of workload vs moderate workload? Did your file get assigned to an overloaded vs un-overloaded processing agent? How fast does your assigned processing agent usually operate? Efficient? Sloth-like?
Lots of factors play into this process, all except for how well prepared the supporting docs are is beyond the applicant's control.
Not that it would mean anything statistically significant, as a single data point, my AOR was mid-April with a lower CRS than 475 and 30+ travel history entries, PPR came a couple weeks back.