Yeah, there’s really only two “common” (although, really fairly rare) ammo causes for a revolver “jam”—high primers, and poorly crimped bullets jumping forward...both of which are most common in reloads, not commercial ammunition.
The high primer issue is easy to check for; first visually inspect it, and run your finger over it...you’ll feel it. The other way is to put the rounds in the cylinder, and then bring back the hammer to the point where the cylinder freely rotates—if it spins freely, you’re good to go...if it bins, you know you’ve got a problem...and can fix it immediately.
Crimp jump can only be checked by running a few rounds first...and also being aware it mainly happens with light for caliber bullets in lightweight, heavy recoiling revolvers (this is the reason S&W says not to run .357 Magnum loads with lighter than 125gr bullets in their Airweight PD’s).