There are still plenty of people (like
@Auditor55 and others) who doubt that Atmos will survive.
I can’t blame them. I was in their shoes for a long time thinking that Atmos was going to be like 3D video and other failed formats - just waiting for the other shoe to drop.
I conclude that technologies or formats live or die depending on the home theater market, not the commercial theater market.
If I installed 4 ceiling speakers in the hot attic and could not hear cool overhead effects (like most DTSX movies I’ve seen or commercial Auro3D, Atmos), I would be raising hell against Atmos on Audioholics. I would be telling everyone that Atmos and DTSX suck and warn them not to buy into this format.
And if everyone also felt cheated because they cannot hear any cool overhead effects at home, they’d be doing the same. And then Atmos would be dead for sure.
But once people actually experienced home Atmos (like many of us here), they realized that Atmos is the real deal.
But until they actually experience Home Atmos, I can’t blame their doubt.