How does it work? Because if it was in a mech mod .2 ohm-75W-4.97V would draw more than 20A? How come it doesn't vent?
Any OEM 20A will be good for a 70W single cell regulated device. There's nothing seriously wrong with efest but I wouldn't recommend anyone buy them if they don't already have them.
Amp draw works differently on a regulated device. With a mech you use battery voltage and coil resistance to calculate. For a regulated device you take the wattage you have set and divide by the voltage the mod let's the battery go down to before it shuts off.
For the example you provide, the mod battery won't be at 4.97V, that's the voltage the board is giving to the atty. The board will create a load dynamically that, when plugged into ohms law along with current cell voltage, gives that 75W to the atty. As voltage in the battery drops, the board will create a bigger load, to maintain that 75W draw from the cell. You'll need either a mod that shows actual battery voltage or a multi meter to know what is being drawn at a specific time.
For a single cell mod use the equation [Set wattage] ÷ 3.2V. Most single cell devices shut off at about 3.2V minimum. For a single cell series mod use 6.4V, and for a parallel mod eg istick 100W also use 3.2V,thebsame as for single cell.
Note that at 70-75W a single cell device won't last long. It also likely won't cut off at 3.2V when set so high. In my testing if the Koopor Mini, at its max 60W it cut off at 3.5V with all batteries I tested.