Air, air and fuel, no matter. It has mass, and if the volume of each intake pulse is right for the camshaft and characteristics, then it will work with any thing from a foot to half a foot, with an inlet runner diameter equal to the area of each port at the gasket face.
Most limits are package based.
Two important things.
1) Longer runners generally help mid range torque, but only if your fuel delivery system has isloated runners (port on port or so called IR systems).
2) Secondly, the runner volume must be a certain % of the engine volume to provide inertail ramming. Air gets compressed, and volumetric efficiency goes up. It mildly supercharges the incomming air, and this increases the amount of air fuel mix in the combustion chamber.
The 'inertial weight' of each slug of fuel air mix is based on its volume and it's ability to accelerate. It compresses as it banks up at the intake valve.
On little A-series engines, seven inch intake runner works great with a 45DCOE carb. On a siamese 2 intake port engine feeding four cylinders, it got 1.4" ports. Intake runner volume is 21 cubic inches, and it was 25% of the total engine capacity
The 413 Max Wedge had twin 4-bbls, and 13 inches of intake runner, and it had dynamic mid range torque with eight runners about 1.8" in diameter, about 60% of the total volume of the engine.
The old X-flow 250 EFI engines got small 1.4" ruuners, 12 inches long, for brillaint low end torque, about 150 cubes of inlet runner for 60%.
Eg GT40 or Aussie 5.6 Windsor 250 engines had very short intake runners, and large volume. The stock 5.0 HO lost power above 320 hp, and even the GT40 couldn't flow 400 hp with ease. The 250 Windsor intkae plenumb had short stub stacks, and was based on the later Boss 260 and 290 intakes, and can flow well over 430 hp with ease. Very little length, and very large stub stacks that look like old GT40 289 Weber carb manifolds.