If money is of no issue to you, I'd rate it fair. Just know that
every laptop is constrained by either power or thermals. Both the CPU and GPU. In the end, you would get more life and usability out of a desktop if at all possible. If an internal component on a laptop goes out, more likely than not, it's done. Unlike a desktop.
Here is roughly what the i7-10750H performs closely to in desktop terms. That's a CPU from 2016.
I personally have a Intel 9700K.
Here it scores on average 96.9%. Since I have a desktop, I am not constrained by thermals or power. So
Here I gave my 9700K a quick, fat and sloppy 5Ghz all core OC and my performance went up by 9.5%, almost topping the charts for 9700K benchmarks. If the above doesn't bother you, then the particular laptop you linked isn't a bad deal. But average.