Considering the alternative in question is fireworks, which have been in use for literally thousands of years, not being "interesting" is a questionable argument.
Fireworks offer visceral enjoyment because it's explosions overhead. Drones don't offer this but they do have a "wow" factor for their novelty. Now that the novelty is wearing off there's little left to actually enjoy.
The absence of explosions makes drone shows much more enjoyable for some people. Explosions are also the reason fireworks are banned and/or regulated in lots of places most of the time.
LLM's only make a "best guess" for each next token. That's it. When it's wrong we call it a "hallucination" but really the entire thing was a "hallucination" to begin with.
This is also analogous to humans - who also "hallucinate" incorrect answers, usually "hallucinate" incorrect answers less when they "Think through this step by step before giving your answer", etc.
I was fortunate enough to attend a talk given by the person primarily responsible for writing it and he (as well as some people already using it) said they see no discernable performance difference.