Is there such a thing any more? I remember the old thread on here "fake drums sounding real" we've moved on a bit since then. I'm going out on a limb here and I'm gonna say with my hybrid e-kit of roland brain & cymbals and koby mesh pads all round and superior 2.0 I can CONSISTANTLY (key word) get a sought after drum sound time after time that would be difficult to replicate in a decent sounding room with a mic locker 5 times the price of my investment in e-drums.
Programs like superior 2.0, BFD, SSD, EZX..programing midi paterns in all day may still not get you the desired "feel" you are looking for BUT, using the same programs with a real drummer on an E-kit triggering these has now surpassed what can be got in a real studio now...oh that's gonna sting!
tomas hakke (meshuggah drummer) and morgan agren (mats/morgan band, fredrik thordendal's special defects--and the greatest drummer of all time; yeah, i said it) were both involved in the development of BFD, and hakke even used it on 2 meshuggah albums ("I" and "catch 33"). the sound is very good, and on catch 33 i would've never known it wasn't his acoustic set if they hadn't made that info transparently available.
to that end, sound replacement has come a long enough way to fool us all when utilized properly. is it better? i'm not entirely sure. it has its place, especially in metal, but can you imagine using it for jazz? imo, the nuance that a master like antonio sanchez or dennis chambers brings to the table is simply not currently available in a software bundle. i won't go so far as to say it's an impossibility, but it ain't here yet.
the "bleed" feature of BFD gives it an upper hand for sure, but you would probably need at least 100 degrees of volume alone (much less overtones, reverb, etc) and something much more sophisticated than touch sensitivity OR randomization to really capture the technique of a jazz master.
i do get what you're saying--consistency is a beautiful thing, and certainly makes life easier. i suppose i'm making sort of a digital vs analog argument here (although i'm a drummer who uses a digital platform, so you figure it out

).
i guess a better way to put it is--would a mahavishnu orchestra or led zeppelin album sound "better" with sound replacement? i doubt it. the "feel" can often be much more than just real playing.
besides, what self-respecting drummer wants to play with triggers?

