Atoms can be prepared in large numbers of hundreds of thousands in optical lattices and many thousands in optical tweezers. The atoms can be moved around or spatially arranged and re-arranged nearly arbitrarily, thus allowing for many different configurations for quantum computing and simulation. Two-qubit gates can be switched comparatively fast due to the strength (=speed) of the Rydberg blockade.
Up to date, qubit fidelities that quantify how well or exact the gates can be and hence quantifying the performance of the quantum computing steps, are very high (0.99x) but still lower than the fidelities achieved with ion quantum computing. But in the last years significant progress has been achieved!