Another way to phrase that is that they prefer to serve you by not requiring you to tinker with low-level stuff, so that you have more time to spend on things you want to do.
Of course, questions are whether Apple’s solution can theoretically work good enough, and if so, whether their implementation is good enough.
The actual best-practice for batteries is 50% when unused, and the 20% to 80% range when used.
They already don't provide 50% at all, even though my laptop has been kept connected to mains for 1 year straight. All I get is a range of 76% to 80% or so, with a battery life that keeps diminishing for no reason.
But, in reality, they don't even provide the 20% to 80% range, either, because it still charges to 100% on each disconnect, however brief it may be.
I've had multiple batteries completely fail within just a few years after being topped up to 100% all the time.
I also have a ThinkPad with a 15-year-old battery that's still working just fine (1 hour runtime is not that bad for such an old battery), because it's been kept at the 50% most of the time when I don't need to use it on the go. If it was kept at 100%, I'm pretty sure it wouldn't last 2 minutes now.
Of course, questions are whether Apple’s solution can theoretically work good enough, and if so, whether their implementation is good enough.