Let's not jump the gun here...
You know in web dev how everybody condemns browser sniffing in favor of feature detection? But sometimes browser sniffing is the only "viable" solution because fringe browsers or fringe versions of browsers have severe bugs that break sites in ways that are impossible or extraordinarily difficult to work around (IE, Safari...), or even intentionally lie to feature detection to make itself seem more cutting-edge than it really is1?
Or how the web collectively freaks out whenever a new browser engine is introduced?
Anyone who has authored HTML/CSS for a reasonable amount of time knows that browsers are not perfect and specific versions of specific browsers can have bugs that otherwise break their claims of standards-compliance, and in turn feature detection. Yes, use feature detection where possible, but there are times when it doesn't work because some feature that a browser claims to support works correctly in version 60 but breaks in 61. Chrome is much, much worse for this sort of thing than any other browser, but that doesn't mean Firefox doesn't have its own bugs to speak of.
We had to deal with this once in the transition from WebKit to Blink, and a second time in the transition from Trident to EdgeHTML - is it so unreasonable to have to deal with the same thing transitioning from Gecko to Stylo?
It's a similar story here. You can't really predict how new devices may behave compared to current devices even if the on-paper specs suggest they should behave identically or run your code the same way. This is true not only of iPhones but of all hardware — I've seen questions showing code inexplicably crashing on specific variations of specific GPUs that turned out to be due to undocumented hardware and/or driver issues for example.2 Questions about new devices are inevitably going to surface as soon as they're announced because the vendors don't usually go out of their way to publish comprehensive documentation preemptively answering all of our developer questions.
And that's OK. That's why Stack Overflow exists. Questions that turn out to be so like existing ones as to be effectively duplicates can be closed as such. Questions that warrant closer examination because, indeed, your native or web layout might look wonky on that iPhone XR because of its lower resolution despite its larger screen size compared to the iPhone XS are absolutely apt to include the device-specific tags, because that question is specific to those devices. It's for the same reason web questions have browser-specific tags sometimes.
1 Depending on who you ask, this is basically what other browsers supporting -webkit
prefixes are doing, except they have a very good reason to do so.
2 I would cite iPhone-specific examples from recent generations but I haven't actively developed for iOS in many years — maybe someone else can help.