Hammer > Nail.
Everything I've shown you is to underline the fact that what you see in recent reviews is just a new balancing trick but the net result still hasn't changed the overall monitor landscape. IPS was on the rise prior to this development, TN has also gotten better but mostly faster, and something similar happens to VA.
Some high refresh panels do that trick right and others don't. That is what makes the difference between a green or orange overshoot block.
Some panels balance out towards a higher average G2G with zero overshoot. Others sit in some happy medium so most people won't notice. Others use strobe. But the bottom line still is that something's gonna give to achieve zero overshoot at high refresh on IPS. And its not just a box of advantages, neither is strobe. That doesn't make me an internet sommelier (lol), its calling things what they are. What YOU personally do with that information, or anyone else, that is something you're allowed to make up yourself.
TFTcentral does nothing else, really. You won't find them saying there is a perfect panel. And even the best ones have drawbacks. What matters is how you weigh them.
Point being, if YOU really like strobe and you get the experience of an overshoot-free fast IPS, power to you. Others cannot stand it and will never buy the same panel. Or they cannot afford it, as it is a feature that costs money. I personally like strobe as well, but I will not use it to advocate IPS has become faster than everything else.
Its always a choice of qualities, and there isn't a single IPS, VA or TN monitor that is perfect, either with or without strobe. Something's gonna give. Simple. Everything else is too minor to even worry about, and that is why I feel blanket statements like 'IPS is now faster than TN' are completely worthless and are also simply untrue. If an IPS is faster, it uses tricks that will show up elsewhere.
If you can't agree with that reason... we're done.
And last... about pedestals... no; I just stick to a point when I know I'm right. And I will also admit it when I get proven wrong - openly and honestly. Has happened a few times, but not here.