Fully agree, the 100-300hz area (tempted to say 100-500hz) is often neglected. And people also often make it worse by trying to turn up their subwoofers chasing that punch, but in effect making the 100-300hz area even less powerful in comparison.
If you can get away with it in your room (and have enough power in the speakers) I'd be trying to get almost full power from 20hz up to 200hz, maybe 1-2dB lower at 100-200hz compared to 20-100hz (many drop off pretty hard at 100hz), and then an even/gradual drop up to 1-2khz from there. It can be tricky to get right in some rooms (100-300hz can get muddy, it's a fine balance), but is VERY impactful when you get it right.
Yes, this is what I refer to as the power band response. In my design I have allowed major resources to that power band, which is shared by the two 7.5" drivers, and the upper 10" driver.
Most people think the sub is crucial for reproducing drums, and yet the sub contributes little to the issue. The major output of a kick drum is from 50 Hz to 500 Hz. There is significant harmonic content from 500 Hz to 7KHz!
Now I believe to properly reproduce a drum, and actually pretty much everything, is to preserve the correct time relationships across the whole spectrum.
To me it is intuitive that Ted Jordan's research at Goodmans 60 odd years ago showing that it was a bad idea to separate fundamentals from harmonics is correct. Everything I have done with speakers confirms that truth. Without that you have no chance of a realistic impulse response, and percussive sounds especially will be short changed.
So spreading subs around a room to even out room response creates even greater ills. I have long maintained that subs need to be part of the total design of the speakers they are matched with. I would never do a reference design without designing it that way, and I have a feeling you would not either.
I certainly have no trouble getting my rig to produce extremely accurate transients, or kicks and what ever else you want to call them.