Original FTC power output statue was created in 1973, required a 1 hour preconditioning and then measured power output with 2 channels driven into 8 ohms, @ 20Hz, 1kHz, and 20kHz. But this test was too difficult for the big, high-powered stereo receivers to meet, so actually Pioneer was hit with an FTC Cease & Desist Order that they discontinued their SX-1980. Whose published power output was 270W per channel but actually 165W per channel when measured by the (73) standard....
Marantz was the only receiver brand that actually met the FTC standard into 8 Ohms and 4 Ohms, most brands never even mentioned 4 Ohms. Note the 4 Ohm can be a good indication for real power output.
Next the FTC backed off and left the power disclosure monitoring/challenge to be done by the EIA as multi-channel receivers/products entered the market such as quad...
The EIA technical standards committee made up of Bose, Panasonic and Sony relaxed the standards to 1 channel driven along with the other channels driven @ 1/8 power output. Since more and more products were 7.1 with 7 channels of amplification, it became acceptable to just do
2 channels driven technically equal to 1 channel driven and 6 channels driven @ 1/8 power output.
Since that time
2 channels driven is the defecto standard but now with our global market, internet and Euro standards many brands also quote
DIN power which is highly inflated and misleading..
Just comes down to which brand can release and publish the highest number..
Bottom line...
Stay with the established quality brands, read their specs closely and when available check any test reports..