I am due for my first ('free') service - approx 500 km - and am inclined to ask my store to change the oil. My thinking is that max wear occurs when running in, so why not flush out the gritty oil right away?
Indeed, welcome, Ozar, and congratulations on your spiffing new bike.
My first response is the same as Paul's, an early oil change can't do your new Rohloff HGB any harm.
On the other hand, you say your gear change is already more than acceptably smooth, so it doesn't sound necessary. And there is the consideration that the very fine metal fragments created when a new geared implement is first used, as the gears settle in, is in fact acting as a grinding paste for a necessary action.
If you're old enough to remember when cars had 3000 mile (5000km) oil change requirements, you'll also remember when new or after work on any part of the power train those cars had the first oil change at 1000m/1600km. That was a compromise between not filtering out beneficial swarf while it was still doing useful work polishing the gears together, and not leaving it past the stage where it was no longer useful and might be harmful.
In your shoes, 500km would strike me as too soon, so I'd leave the first oil change to a 1000km and then do it myself so I can use a magnet and a magnifying glass to see what was actually knocked off the Rohloff gears.
It's pretty much six of one and half a dozen of the other, though. If you're planning to let your dealer do all your oil changes, as is common for owners of this class of German bike, the dealer doing it with the free service at 500km avoids the inconvenience of taking your bike back in another month.
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If you keep up this rate of riding, you'll notch up 6000km a year -- and soon you'll be glad you opted for the durable Rohloff.