I agree.
However one thing I've never been really interested in are all the 'bells and whistles' Arturia bolt to their emulations which diverge their sound away from the original instrument they are supposed to be emulating, and that's probably where you and I respectfully differ. I would choose a real synth for its particular sound and features, but when emulations start to add a load of other things that suddenly make that instrument totally unrecognisable, and instead turn it into something that could be literally any generic synth VST, I feel I may as well just be using one of the many soft-synths already included in my DAW (Logic).
It's taken a while for some Arturia instruments to actually sound like the real thing, instead of sounding like just every other Arturia instrument with different kinds of added effects not present on the original. 'Exhibit A' in my opinion is the CS80, which in V4 version, has only just come round to sounding anything like a real CS80, especially the panel presets. I can only assume that until V4, Arturia were unable to get their hands on a real CS80 for any length of time, and so their CS80 V1 to V3 were little more than 'best guesses', especially the filters and the ring modulator, none of which worked authentically. The closest authentic CS80 emulation I have ever heard is still the Memory Moon ME80, but at least the CS80 V4 now comes a very close second.
For years Arturia modelled their soft-synths using something they called their 'TAE' engine, which they claimed stood for True Analog Emulation. But IMO it was basically just the same (or very very similar) code bolted behind various different UX 'front ends', with the result that it often wasn't really possible to tell the sound of one Arturia soft-synth from another, even though the real instruments would sound very very different from each other. Arturia do seem to be moving away from that generic sound though with their recent re-writes in V Collection 9, which is good to see (and hear).