No, like any good controlled-directivity speaker the big Revel progressively rolls off off axis, while keeping the same general response shape through the mids.
With the Revels, the pattern holds until about 10kHz, where things start narrowing due to the size of the tweeter's piston. From Stereophile:
In my experience, I can tell at a glance if there's a chance I'm going to like a speaker or not by looking at such a graph. If it displays a mushroom cloud midrange*, like the horrible-sounding and overpriced Magico speaker whose horizontal polars follow (again from S'phile):
then there is simply no chance I am going to like it. If the horizontal front hemisphere measures smoothly, like the Revel above, or the KEF 201/2 below (S'phile again for internal consistency):
then it's probably worth a listen.
That said, there's a good body of research that suggests off-axis
holes in the response are little cause for concern. While that may be (read: probably is) true, the same is certainly not true for
peaks of the type I'm discussing.
*"Mushroom cloud" is the term I use, because that's what a spectrograph of the response would look like.