Chris, it is "Ye goode olde Specialized"

You are not aware how many ideas and parts the brand tested and replaced year after year. How non-standard they are.
You say "Brose". It is not Brose (the motor is). It is Specialized. Specialized has made a whole own infrastructure/architecture around Brose and Specialized SL (by Mahle) motors. For instance,
@Homestead has an unusual 400 Wh battery with Bluetooth, which was briefly made by the end of 2010s. You cannot just take
any remote and hope it would work. You cannot reset the older generation TCU the way you do it with TCU SL 1 or Mastermind.
Let me give you an excellent example what "Ye goode olde Specialized" can do. Take a 2017 Vado 5.0. It was equipped with a rigid fork and a non-standard thru-axle. It also had a "lemon" BLOKS electronics. It had TRP Zurich brakes (discontinued later) Only a year later, Spesh came with an OEM suspension fork from Suntour, which involved another thru axle and a different front hub. Only two years later, the failed BLOKS was replaced with TCD-w(s), which involved:
- The display
- The remote
- The horn button
- Supernova M99 Pro headlight
- New Supernova tail-light
- A new rear rack
Can you even fancy that?
The 2021 Specialized Turbo Levo Hardtail is an unusual e-bike, which was produced in a short run. Its electronics is unusual. Only Specialized knows what parts are compatible and how to make the things work...
A 2017 Vado 5.0 (45 km/h). 1 November 2019.
A 2020 Vado 6.0. 17 January 2023.
It is the same e-bike but is is totally different at the same time. Only Specialized could make it.