Yes.
With great power comes great responsibility.
To this I agree with the exception of the ability for these designs to hopefully perform
clean.
I think this is where a lot of designs begin to fail is that they don't look beyond the small signal and theoretical numbers in design and thus we find drivers incapable of performing cleanly when pushed.
Mind, not everything is about how loud [read:
LOUD!] any given Driver or system cnl perform, but for those of us interested in the most faithful reproduction of sound, the shortcomings hit pretty easily when exceeding 1or 2 watts.
The responsible folk that are building out rooms with multiple Subs are doing so with the intention of greater efficiency. I know you don't agree with "more is more" (except for more-subs-equals-more-problems
), but discussion yields the theme of only needing to run their monster subs in quantity at less than half power to yield the results they desire.
Frankly, I can't say I have any desire to run some of the insane house curves many use. I've seen some arguing for +20, even!
But I do like the idea of not needing to dump 188v into a Sub to get it to produce a 16Hz Low C at 70dB while running out of excursion and motor stability.
The balance point is somewhere in the middle of all this, of course. But there is a growing market segment that isn't afraid to build large and demand bigger still. These products aren't going away. Rather, I hope we see them get built better and eventually a bit less expensive. (This RBH Sub is more expensive than my first car back in '92!)