Most of the versions I have spent any time reading or using for study have notes. Notes to explain translation difficulties, manuscript differences, idioms & so forth. Online versions contain the same notes provided by printed bibles.
(Notes are not Bible commentary)
The verses that are scrutinised by the KJVO adherents are never printed the way they appear to us on the page or screen.
This means that these Bible opposers are copying the Bible verses directly from KJVO sources that have removed the note tabs
or they are eliminating the note indicators themselves.
Example:
2 Samuel 15
LEX
7 It happened at the end of four
[g] years
that Absalom said to the king, “Please let me go and pay my vow which I have made to Yahweh in Hebron,
CSB
7 When four
[a] years had passed, Absalom said to the king, “Please let me go to Hebron to fulfill a vow I made to the Lord.
NIV
7 At the end of four
[a] years, Absalom said to the king, “Let me go to Hebron and fulfill a vow I made to the Lord.
ESV
7 And at the end of four
[a] years Absalom said to the king, “Please let me go and pay my vow, which I have vowed to the Lord, in Hebron.
KJV
7 And it came to pass after forty years, that Absalom said unto the king, I pray thee, let me go and pay my vow, which I have vowed unto the Lord, in Hebron.
Now the KJVO adherents I've encountered here are offended at the thought of notes on the page. As if a note somehow nullifies the validity of the translation. This could be because they are not accustomed to reading a text with notes.
They give the wrong impression by posting the verses from the Bibles they rage against with the note indicators removed.
Then they claim the translations they don't like are lying.
This is a form of bearing false witness & it happens quite a lot here.
All the Bibles above explain on that page of 2 Sam 15 that some of the manuscripts read forty not four except for the KJV
Newer Christians should beware of the false accusations made against English bibles by KJV Only proponents.