For most engine builds, at least those that are well thought out and good choices made for compression and camshaft events they will like around 10-12 degrees initial timing, about 10-11 (20-22 at the crank) from the mechanical advance, and another 10-14 from the vacuum advance.
I try to avoid all the manifold vs ported vacuum advance debates, but for most engines tuned here I do NOT add any additional timing at idle speed and use a ported source to the VA. Of course saying that on most Forums is a good way to cause a bunch of folks to get their panties all wadded up. Almost immediately you'll get a link to or copy/paste some LONG lengthy VA article in your face. It will be followed by stories of how your engine will overheat if you don't use MVA, or it will use more fuel, not make as much power, or even detonate at high RPM's when the ported source applies the VA at WOT.
ALL of those responses are from very poorly informed sources with little to no experience at all doing this sort of thing, but that's the World we live in today and sadly WAY too many folks have opinions about topics based mostly if not all on Internet Google searches instead of actually doing it for a living or at least having a LOT of hands on experience with these things.
I've lost count as to how many of those aftermarket spring/weight "kits" I've removed from distributors over the years, then hooked the VA back up and to it's original ported source on the carb. I'll go into the distributor and set up the advance curve so no timing is added at idle speed and it advances smooth and steady with increasing RPM's just like the factory set them up.
This "all-in" right off idle NEVER works well and not sure why despite the fact that it's now 2023 and we should be a LOT smarter these days that folks till tune with those JUNK parts. The fact of the matter is here that the better you do with your choices for the engine build, optimum compression, cam events, tight squish, efficient combustion chambers, etc, the LESS timing and fuel the engine will like, want, need and respond well to once placed in service.
The super-quick timing curves and "all-in" right off idle plus running initial timing WAY off the scale at idle are in most cases "crutch" fixes for other issues, like WAY too much duration, LSA too tight, compression ratio too low for the cam, or not nearly enough idle fuel available to the mixtures screws for the engine combo.........