FLYBOYJ
"THE GREAT GAZOO"
Agreed:
"...Galland said that persistent allied attacks on Axis fuel supplies also hindered Me 262 operations. Toward the end of the war, Me 262s were often towed to the end of the runway by draft horses in order to conserve fuel. In addition, many airframes sat idle waiting for engines that never arrived."
"Although it was the first by a considerable margin, the Me 262 was not the best jet of its era. Britain's Gloster Meteor, which used more reliable centrifugal-flow turbojet engines, joined the Royal Air Force in 1944. The first practical U.S. jet fighter, the P-80 Shooting Star, reached Europe by May 1945, but saw no combat in World War II..."
The Messerschmitt Me 262 Jet Fighter | Defense Media Network
Beating a dead horse -
In terms of performance, the 1944 Gloster Meteor and P-80 were both inferior to the Me 262 despite the -262's engine reliability issues, compare all 3 aircraft (in their 1944 configuration) and this is quite evident. You could speculate all you want what would have been the final outcome if they met in combat. In the post war both the Meteor and the P-80 still had some development before they both became an effective weapon platform.