Yeah, green is marginal, but still okay.
Note the distinction -- "traditional" GaP green has an acceptable voltage drop (about 2.2V), high efficiency (GaInN) green does not!
Amazingly, GaP is so inefficient (or, at least, so much harder to optimize?), that it pays to use a higher voltage material entirely (GaInN is ~3V, normally emitting cyan to ultraviolet depending on exact composition), using either a microstructure or a phosphor to make green out of it (I forget how they do it exactly). Consequently, the green is a little different, usually more pure or "lime-green"-ish, in comparison to the slightly yellowish green of GaP. It's close enough you wouldn't notice independently, but side-by-side it's pretty obvious. Cool, huh?
Yes! (Heck, I still think LEDs are hella cool, even though they’re nothing new to me.)
To me, the difference in color between GaP green (which I describe as lime green) and GaInN green (which I describe as “emerald”) is striking. I can readily tell them apart independently. (But I am very, very good at color perception in general, apparently.)
I’ve never seen a green GaInN with phosphor (as in, I know they exist, I just haven’t seen one with my own eyes in real life), all the ones I’ve gotten have a bare die. So if the bandgap alone isn’t responsible for the color, it’s some other clever modification to the diode itself.
I once bought a cheap pack of “ice blue” (i.e. cyan, no phosphor) LEDs from China, and while it was evident that no meaningful binning had taken place, it was interesting that the range of colors within it ranged from a kinda cerulean blue all the way to turquoise with a distinct green tinge!