Guns (any/all of them) "like" what they "like."
I've not shot anything heavier than 55 grains in any of my 1 turn in 7" or 1 turn in 8" AR15s. I have some heavy stuff to reload, just haven't gotten around to it.
If you reload you may find a bullet/powder/primer combination for your rifle that really makes the big bullets shoot good groups.
People say 55 grain Hornady FMJBT are not accurate bullets. Best group (100 yd) I ever shot with an AR15 was with those same bullets.
If the rifle likes 55 grain shoot those. I'll bet they are cheaper than the heavier "match" bullets.
How far have you shot them out to? How far it the farthest you are likely to shoot? Having a load that shoots 1 MOA out to 600 yds. is nice, but now would you know if the farthest you can shoot is 100 yds.?
Not an AR, but I can tell you with my old M1A (.308 Win.) I tried bullets from Speer, Hornady and Sierra from 110 grains to 180 grains. I know, they say don't shoot 180 grain bullets in an M1A. I tried 10 or 12 powders, extruded/IMR and ball/Win & Hodgdens. The best shooting load was with 180 grain Sierra match bullets with an IMR powder that should never be used in M1As (burn rate way to slow). Broke two op rods before I gave up on it. Chamber pressure well below max but gas port pressure well above max (for the gas port/gas system). A rifle likes what it likes.
Besides, trying different ammo or different handloads is fun. More range time, more learning.
I will offer a piece of advice. Once you find something that shoots well, don't stop trying other ammo. A time may come when you can't get the first good shooting ammo/loads anymore and its good to already know what to buy that does as well in your rifle.