That certainly is a valid point.
The flip side is... just because you rarely hear of folks complaining that they had problems with incorrectly set up
wheel offset doesn't mean there weren't any. Most folks don't even know there is such a thing as scrub radius, much less what it does and how it affects handling. I've seen no shortage of crashed
Stingers and G70 posted on FB groups. Most blame bald tires, other drivers, slick roads, the weather, etc., etc. How many of them have the present of mind for proper post-event analysis to know if wrong offset (scrub radius) played a part in their misfortune? If I have to guess... none.
Scrub radius affects asymmetric transient handling, not steady state. That mean when you are just cruising merrily down the hwy, there is virtually no immediate effect. Even when the car is in a turn, as long as both front wheels are experiencing similar road conditions, any effect overall is minimal.
HOWEVER... what happens when one front
wheel hits a big puddle of water? Or you veer off the tarmac and one side gets past the road shoulders into the weeds? In both of those cases,
excessive front positive scrub radius will tend to pull your car deeper into the weeds, or more into the puddle. This can be very destabilizing. Startled, an inexperience driver might instinctively yank the steering
wheel in the opposite direction in an attempt to pull back towards the roadway center. At higher speeds, this can induce an adverse yaw response in the chassis and quite possibly snap oversteer and/or spin the car out of control.
How likely would the driver know enough to blame the gorgeous $2500 set of shiny wheels/tires/spacers that made their car look oh-so sexy?