Something I pointed out in the comments of the Electrek article that talked about these bikes is the awd bike in the pictures is non functional. The motor has no cable coming out of it and its not fed from inside the fork.
2wd on an ebike is an enormous benefit, but its not the sort of thing you'll be able to grasp/understand without riding one. All the stuff about increased weight and the ability to do the same job with a more powerful rear motor melt away when you get out and ride one. Speaking of which, before some silly motorbike comments spring from certain lips, these bikes have throttles, but are effectively pure pedelecs. 2wd pedal assist providing distributed traction is a thing of beauty that has to be experienced to be appreciated.
The key to understanding 2wd ebikes is to get the increased power out of your head. 2wd doesn't really increase speed much at all. What it does do is distribute traction and torque. And shared traction between two motors transforms the bike enormously, letting it go places no bicycle ever could.
One of the first misconceptions that commonly pop up is the contention that there is insufficient traction on the front wheel to prevent it from spinning out or becoming unsafe. That concern disappears quickly when you ride one and see it doesn't happen.
Plus the ideal power load on the front wheel - to give you the benefits of front wheel traction without the negatives - is rather low. Furthermore, running two motors together versus just one decreases the heat generated by not a factor of two, but a factor of four. A motor that gets too hot to touch working singly becomes only barely warm when working as a pair. Also, on a 2wd mid+hub config, the front motor keeps the mid drive from having to grunt the bike up from a dead stop on its own, which
in practice totally eliminates all of the wear-and-tear penalties of using a powerful mid drive.
There's more.
I like to build top-quality-component ebikes from the frame up. Quite a few of them are dual motor or AWD or 2WD or whatever you want to call them. Why would you build an AWD ebike?
talesontwowheels.com
This one is my sand crawler, dedicated to recreation. But my last two cargo bikes are mid+hub as well and rely on the low-front-power, distributed traction thinking.
View attachment 165591