The question for me always comes back to ‘but why’ though.
I just don’t see why any normal person would want to swap clear, consistent progressive power for well just not.
For the same reason that some people might prefer a sailing dinghy to a speedboat, or riding a horse instead of a motorbike. It's not necessarily about doing something in objectively the easiest or quickest fashion.
And so, sometimes, the satisfaction in driving is not just having power, but managing it. Which is what I currently enjoy about driving a traditional, petrol car - the power delivery is imperfect, so I have to interact with the gearbox to get the most out of it.
I am not claiming I would get no fun out of an EV, and I can completely understand the appeal of almost unfettered access to that power all of the time. In fact I am looking forward to that, too. But I do fear that in moving to EV, we will be losing some of the character that I enjoy from an old fashioned car.
Which is why if manufacturers are attempting to come up with ways to emulate that in EV vehicles, I'm all for it (assuming of course, ICEs are going to be totally phased out, which I think will be the case).
I always used to be a manual is best person, then I drove a car with a modern automatic gear box and that was that, I was 100% sold on them. I ended up buying electric so it ended up being a mute point but if I didn’t, I wouldn’t have bought another manual.
To be clear, I'm not really advocating what's in the link (ie, a full emulation of a traditional "manual" gearbox) because I think that would be a bit too contrived. But as I said, I can't see it being beyond the realms of possibly to engineer an EV like a modern flappy paddle ICE - the difference being that in it's automatic mode, it drives completely like an EV with consistent power, whereas in manual, it emulates a manual gear selection and torque curves. Then everyone is happy, surely?
Also, forgive me if it's not the case, but I can't help feeling you're being a little disingenuous in your post. If you "always used to be a manual person", you must presumably have enjoyed driving them at some point? So even if you moved to automatics and were sold on them completely, I find it hard to believe that you are acting so bewildered that some people might still enjoy the way a manual drives, even if it is objectively inferior. (Reading that back, I realise it might sound a bit antagonistic, but please don't take it that way
).