I'm never quite sure what people mean by overmating. As long as there is minimal feather damage to the hen and the rooster doesn't die of exhaustion they can do it as often as they like.

Part of the problem with high production hens is they lay lots of eggs that all need fertilizing in both the hens and roosters eyes. Given jungle fowl may only lay 30 eggs in a season and want to sit on most of them so called overmating isn't a problem.
If we humans stopped trying to squeeze too many eggs out of the poor hens this is one problem that would diminish. When the hens here are not in lay, they don't get bothered by the roosters. Nobody on the mountain where I live complains about over mating. Part of this is the chickens are free range and the hen can escape if necessary and they tend not to keep the high production breeds.
So, no, properly kept chickens of the 'right' breeds with a rooster of that breed so the sizes are right seems to stop the problem.
Most feral chickens and jungle fowl can manage 1:1 and say 1:3or 4 ratios very well.