Comment by lucideer
This will be true in some interviews, but not in all.
I'm generally against using leetcode in interviews, but wherever I've seen it used it's usually for one reason & one reason alone: known dysfunctional hiring processes. These are processes where the participants in the hiring process are aware of the dysfunction in their process but are either powerless or - more often - too disorganised to properly reform the process.
Sometimes this is semi-technical director level staff leveraging HR to "standardise" interview techniques by asking the same questions across a wide range of teams within a large corp. Other times this is a small underresourced team cobbling together interview questions from online resources in a hurry, not having the cycles to write a tailored process for themselves.
In these cases, you're very likely to be dealing with a technical interviewer who is not an advocate of leetcode interviewing & is attempting to "look around" the standardised interview scoring approach to identify innovative stand out candidates. In a lot of cases I'd hazard even displaying an interest in / some knowledge of solvers would count significantly in your favour.