There's a very competent 'naval histriographer' (not a typo, his logo says so) by the name of Drachinifel. His YT channel is an amazing source of information about warships from different periods, up to about WW2. However, due to nature of naval warfare in and post this war, he is forced to talk a lot about aircraft too. For that, he usually reaches out to people more competent in aviation history, asking them to provide more detailed info. I believe I already linked some of his material.
He has two very good pieces on the iconic A6M, and they are worth listening to. It's obviously English, but I suspect there will be subtitles (though they may be autogenerated, in which case they will contain a lot of strange items - take it with a grain of salt if you prefer reading subtitles to listening to what's being said). The first deals with a pretty common myth of A6M being not original Japanese design (a myth similar to the discussion about Spitfire's laminar wing and its 'real' origin):
The other one tries to answer the question of how good/bad the plane really was:
I highly recommend both, not only because of the data related to this particular plane, but also a lot of contextual information (since it's impossible to talk about Zero without mentioning its opponents, or doctrine used, or technological advancements). It's time well-spent.
As a bonus, I highly recommend finding Drach's 3 other videos - two about Russian 2nd Pacific Squadron (journey preceding the Battle of Tsushima and about the battle itself), and the last one about the Imperial Russian ship 'Kamchatka'. The three videos are bound to put a huge grin on your ugly mugs