Chamber finish is always a hotly debated subject, and the people that believe in scored chambers will never give up...
... but here are some things to think about.
The Blish effect (google it) does NOT depend on the surface finish - it is working at the molecular lever. Polished brass will stick to steel, under pressure, just as well as brass with a "cross hatch" finish.
And, if you think that the thin walls of a soft brass case (that you can crush with a 99¢ pair of pliers), can protect two heavy, ballistic steel lugs, I have a bridge to sell you.
Think about it - we worry about FL sizing too much, and pushing the shoulder back too mush, because it causes head separations. So, if the body is sticking to the chamber walls, why is the case head "going south" and crashing into the bolt face.. if it is strong enough to protect our helpless bolt lugs?
The brass walls cannot protect anything -- and the steel lugs are so damn hard, that they are almost indestructible...
Exhibit - A...
A Remington 700 bolt from a 22-250 that was erroneously loaded with ball pistol powder ("Well, Golly, it looked like H-414"). Pressure was estimated to be 270,000+ PSI.
The case head re-formed into the space in the bolt face (AFTER the extractor and sides were blown off)
... now here is the best part.
The bolt and action were fine, as far as head space was concerned - the lugs were not damaged, and there were no marks or setback in the receiver shelf. If you were willing to push fired cases out with a cleaning rod, you could have cleaned it up and used the bolt as it was.
But, desiring real extraction

a new bolt was bought, and the gun is in service today.
Now, if you want to make some silly argument that the brass case is "protecting" the fragile bolt... you need to think about.
Second.
Most of us know that the proper way to set up your sizing die (FL or Bump) is to set it so the stripped bolt (no pin or ejector) will not close all the way by it's own weight on a properly sized case.
The reason for this is that as the bolt closes, the bolt face moves slightly forward - and when the bolt handle drops half way down, it is because the case has been pushed forward and the shoulder is against the chamber shoulder, and the case head is being pushed by the bolt face - in other words... the case is 1 or more thou LONGER than the chamber.
This is called "Crush".
So, when you fire this $5,000 benchrest rifle, the case is ALREADY hard against the bolt face, so ALL of the pressure is transferred to the bolt lugs.
Why isn't that rifle falling apart, if the "theory" of cases protecting bolts is true?
Because that theory is pure...