True, but Banchero is primarily a midrange shooter and shows shaky confidence in his three point shot. If you remove his 7 for 14 hot streak in the last three games his three point shooting percentage goes down to 31%. It's easy to forget now considering the last time we saw Ben Simmons in the NBA he refused to shoot from anywhere on the floor, but back in HS and LSU and even early on in his career with the Sixers he did score a lot of his points with midrange jumpers. He was expected to be at least a 15-18 ppg scorer, good enough to be a primary initiator and second or third option in an offense.
I don't like direct player comparisons because they're almost always reductive and misleading. It's very unlikely that Banchero develops into the player that Ben Simmons is now -- but if you look at who Ben Simmons was as a prospect and who Banchero projects to be in the NBA, I see two point forwards who create primarily in the midrange or attacking the basket whose biggest selling points are above-average mobility, athleticism, and ballhandling skills for their size and proficiency in creating good looks for their teammates. Given the trends in outside shooting we've seen over the last 5-6 years, if you advance 18 year old Ben Simmons from the class of 2016 to the class of 2022 I think he probably takes 100 three point jumpers in college instead of three.
While Simmons had defense to hang his hat on, Banchero will need to excel as a scorer with his less impressive defensive tools and that can work in the NBA in the right circumstances but you either need him to become an above average outside shooter or you need to surround him with a big man and guards who are.