Worked the numbers and got this for what its worth:
For states/districts which went to one party in both 2016 and 2020 by at least 10 points, and that same party leads this year in both the RCP and 270tw averages by 10+ points, Democrats have 11 states and 2 districts for 154 EV, and Republicans have 18 states;
Add in states/districts in which one party in both 2016 and 2020 by at least 5 points, and that same party leads this year in both the RCP and 270tw averages by 5+ points, Democrats add 3 more states and rise to 186 EV, while Republicans add 5 more states and rise to 188 EV;
Add in state/districts in which one party in both 2016 and 2020 by 0.1-4.9 points, and that same party leads this year in both the RCP and 270tw averages by 0.1-4.9 points, Democrats add 4 states and rise to 223 EV, while Republicans add 2 more states and rise to 234 EV.
So for the final remaining seven states and two districts at stake, Trump needs 36 EV while Harris needs 47 EV.
And it comes down to Pennsylvania (19 EV), Georgia (16 EV), Michigan (15 EV), Arizona (11 EV), Wisconsin (10 EV), Nevada (6 EV), Maine (2 EV), and the 2nd district of Nebraska and Maine's 2nd district with 1 EV each.
I'd say Trump is in a much better place.