There are many factors that make a good barrel. The bore must be uniform size (or choked), the twist must me uniform or evenly gaining, the finish must be reasonable. The percentage of land to groove matters. I never had a barrel with skinny grooves and wide lands that shot to my accuracy standards. The depth of grooves matters, it must be such that you get some compression of the patch in the grooves. And, way down list is the shape of the grooves.
Ease of cleaning comes with a good finish more than the shape of the groove, IMHO. It does not matter to me because I swab between shots.
My previously mentioned 36 caliber also had a poor finish, tight and loose spots and the grooves were too deep. I knew it was junk before I shot it. After about a pound of powder, a bunch of lead, and several trips to the range, and lots of lead lapping, I am setting it aside and moving on.
If you pay attention to the things I mentioned the odds of an accurate barrel increase. There are no guarantees though. Again I am talking about best possible target shooting accuracy. IF the shooting is done at 25 yards and/or off hand, you will not see any difference.