Other than I won't cry if I have to lift the bike AND I'm not trying to be a Specialized salesperson... 
I intentionally chose an M600 powered bike over the Ultra, and also went out of my way to try an M500-powered bike for a day when I was visiting the EU.
I'm happy I got my X2 with the VESC-based LudiV2 controller, but I literally never run on top 'Ludi' mode (of 3, street, trail and ludi), set it for 9 assistance levels, reduce max current/power and generally ride most of the time on level 2 of 9, occasionally bumping to 3 or 4 of 9 depending on where I'm riding, etc.
I would NOT be interested in purchasing a bike in the US with a fixed max speed of 15kmh or whatever is max EU speed, and this is one of the annoyances of riding my wife's Gazelle or riding with her on occasion when we're on the road - max speed of 20MPH is nonsense in the US.
There's also something fun about 'ride fast by throttle or with low effort' but both for low range reasons, wanting actual exercise, and acknowledging 'this really isn't an electric motorcycle or replacement for my motorcycles,' it's not how I'd ride daily, for my purposes.
I've watched the 'super-light' market on and off, and am less excited by Specialized's over-the-top-anemic SL version vs e.g. Orbea's but it's a relatively new space and there's more to come. The M500 I rode in Prague was overall ok, and there as well, I rarely was using upper power levels.
This is a long thread, but somewhere in there @Stefan Mikes mentioned 'the joy of going from the SL to his normal-powered Specialized.' This is actually my concern on the (anemic-leaning) Specialized SL...unless current models have changed, they may be a bit too lean on the power side, so even you enjoy swapping to the 'more power' one now and then.
So yeah, short version I can see some group of people that not-crazy-powered bikes appeal to. It won't work for the 'I want a mini motorcycle' or 'I want to commute a long ways with no sweat' cases, but I personally might be up for e.g. a 'Luna Ultralight' with M510 with a Ludi controller, or a sanely-priced Orbea or Specialized <next gen> super light depending on the specs.
I intentionally chose an M600 powered bike over the Ultra, and also went out of my way to try an M500-powered bike for a day when I was visiting the EU.
I'm happy I got my X2 with the VESC-based LudiV2 controller, but I literally never run on top 'Ludi' mode (of 3, street, trail and ludi), set it for 9 assistance levels, reduce max current/power and generally ride most of the time on level 2 of 9, occasionally bumping to 3 or 4 of 9 depending on where I'm riding, etc.
I would NOT be interested in purchasing a bike in the US with a fixed max speed of 15kmh or whatever is max EU speed, and this is one of the annoyances of riding my wife's Gazelle or riding with her on occasion when we're on the road - max speed of 20MPH is nonsense in the US.
There's also something fun about 'ride fast by throttle or with low effort' but both for low range reasons, wanting actual exercise, and acknowledging 'this really isn't an electric motorcycle or replacement for my motorcycles,' it's not how I'd ride daily, for my purposes.
I've watched the 'super-light' market on and off, and am less excited by Specialized's over-the-top-anemic SL version vs e.g. Orbea's but it's a relatively new space and there's more to come. The M500 I rode in Prague was overall ok, and there as well, I rarely was using upper power levels.
This is a long thread, but somewhere in there @Stefan Mikes mentioned 'the joy of going from the SL to his normal-powered Specialized.' This is actually my concern on the (anemic-leaning) Specialized SL...unless current models have changed, they may be a bit too lean on the power side, so even you enjoy swapping to the 'more power' one now and then.
So yeah, short version I can see some group of people that not-crazy-powered bikes appeal to. It won't work for the 'I want a mini motorcycle' or 'I want to commute a long ways with no sweat' cases, but I personally might be up for e.g. a 'Luna Ultralight' with M510 with a Ludi controller, or a sanely-priced Orbea or Specialized <next gen> super light depending on the specs.
Last edited: