Like I said, before this era of high-cri lights, people never complained about not being able to tell things apart.
First, we didn't complain for the last 100 years because incandescent lights, with a typical color temperature of 2700, have a CRI of 100%, so everything looked great.
Then, when LED lights first appeared, we didn't complain because we were simply happy to have an LED light that put out 100 lumens with 2 levels.
But once LED light technology began to mature, and many lights were able to put out more light than needed by their users, with much greater efficiency, we began to focus not only on the quantity of light, but also on the
quality of that light. It's simply the natural progression that we see with any new technology.
To put it simply, we didn't complain about the low CRI of those early LED lights, because we were so enamored of the new technology that we were willing to put up with a beam that maybe didn't render as well as the old incandescent lights, but in return promised so much more, such as a light source that didn't burn out after 50-100 hours.
Of course, we all have different priorities, and some folks simply don't see any real benefit to high CRI lights, and that's fine, it's not really a matter of right or wrong, it's just a personal preference.