Rule of cool
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Worth remembering that in the early 1960s the F-4 would have struggled to compete against contemporary fighters such as the Lightning or Mirage III. No gun, no maneuvering slats, unreliable missiles, and smoky J79s which made it visible for miles...
What the early Phantom DID offer was a very good bomber interceptor that could also act as a bomb truck when needed. But hardly the "best" in any absolute way... in fact in the multirole air/ground interdiction role the outstanding fighter of the decade was probably the Mirage III, which Israel used during the Six Day War to achieve extremely high sortie rates and dominate both in the sky and destroy ground targets with ease.
In the late 60s the Phantom design branched off into 2 excellent fighters: the Doppler-equipped F-4J (from 1967) and gun-equipped F-4E (from 1968 - but especially from 1972 once it was properly equipped with maneuvering slats and smokeless J79s). However you couldn't get both... you had to choose either the Doppler radar or the internal gun. And before 1967/68 without either one of those, you probably wouldn't want to go up against other fighters in a fair fight (i.e. equal training and numbers).
The F4B/C Phantom did offer good combat persistence, with more fuel than the Mirage IIIC and Lightning F2 (small belly tank) and 8 missiles compared to 1 or 2. It was also powerful, not as much as F2 but more than the IIIC.
The F4B/C Phantom's big advantage over the contemporaries is the battery of Sparrows, which might decide the engagement head on at a dozen miles. Once inside that initial barrage the contest becomes much more even, indeed it might even swing to the Lightning F2 or Mirage IIIC favour given they have guns.