Gotcha.. Being that it's my 1st day with the speakers, I cannot say I have heard any negatives with movies or music. I have heard some say get the biggest center you can and that led me to question my center purchase vs the big brother C100. You certainly brought up points I never thought of with having a center.
As we have discussed before, the center is the most difficult to design. I spent more time and effort getting my center speaker right than the others.
It has to have a unique dispersion pattern to be ideal. It can not generally be too big, and yet has to be very powerful. It must have clear natural speech broadcast evenly over the listening area. It must match seamlessly with the mains. But its specification means it should not be identical to the mains as far as dispersion in my view.
The usual horizontal MTM design is a non starter.
A three way with crossover no higher than the speech discrimination band, with the tweeter above the mid is a reasonable layout in my view but not totally ideal. Optimally the mid should cover the whole of the speech discrimination band.
I have designed a three way for our great room system and it fulfills most of the criteria and my wife is happy with it.
My favorite center is the one in our AV room which uses coaxial drivers. This fulfills all my criteria for a center speaker. I could not be more pleased with it.
When our main home was in lakes country and we had a Townhome city bolt hole, I used a full range driver. This worked very well actually, but that is because it was never pushed hard, as we had shared walls.
So, yes the center is a very difficult speaker, and good ones far and few between and most with a design well wide of the mark. I think that center designs based around good powerful coaxial drivers is the best solution to pursue and we need more of them.