Well....how do you know what your drums should sound like when there's nothing else yet put to tape...?
Something has to go first....second....third....and lot of stuff is recorded that way without the need to hold off all tone decisions until the end. Reamping seems to primarily be a guitar tracking obsession, and IMHO (and not meant to insult anyone) it's more about not being sure about what you want or too much concern that what you do track won't cut it later on.
Other instruments don't get the same "red carpet" treatment" in Rock music like guitar does.
I actually do my lead guitar stuff as the last track(s) for most songs....even after the vocals are done.
AFA rhythm guitars, I'll usually drop one track right after the drums, then I'll do the bass, and maybe some keys/organ, and then consider the rhythm guitar track(s) again....adding more and/or redoing the original one.
I just don't see that there has to be only this ONE perfect choice for a guitar tone for a given song, that can ONLY be discovered via reamping and ONLY when you finally get to the mixdown. Heck....if there really was just one obvious tone that could work for given song....I would still just dial it in and record it.
I mean....it's also OK to just pick a tone based on your production goals and what you already "hear in your head", and build off of that....IOW, make a decision and live with it.
If I get to the mix and I'm absolutely hating the guitar track (or any tracks for that matter)....I just go back and re-record them from scratch. I strongly believe that playing & tone go together and work off each other, and reamping just kills that....but to each his own.