Charm it is, but one feature of agri engines which may hold back enthusiasm is that they are mostly asked to run steady state. In the 80's I had run a little Brit car with a 1600 dohc (advanced at the time) with 2 side draft Weber carburetors . At the time they were touted to "almost simulate fuel injection" with their wide range of inlet "chokes," jets, emulsion tubes, and precision build. The Bosch "mechanical" FI (VW)was only a little better. Then came a ride in a 1985 Pontiac Fiero with electronic port FI (primitive by today's standards) riding the workhorse 2.8 V6. A revelation in throttle response!! The Webers could not touch this system. Point is that lawn mowers run steady and kind of bypass this "charm." So many are content with carbs, and the mfgrs are already tooled and have made carbs mostly acceptable. But the CC FI models are a warning shot. And "silence" at the repair shops is a good sign.
Mowers etc. run fairly steady state but they still have changes in load and they operate in different temperatures and such. That's where EFI is a good thing compared to a carburetor because everything is pressurized and controlled based on the results of the settings moment by moment, instead of 'it should draw in enough gas to run OK based on air rushing past a pipe with a hole in it dribbling gasoline'. The old mechanical FI was really stone-aged as it didn't use any 'feedback' from the engine to adjust anything. I think my first vehicle with EFI was a 1986 Ford "LTD II" (basically a very glorified Ford Fairmont) a which I bought well-used and it was a DREAM to drive compared to a Ford Ranger I had from three years before which NEVER ran right. It ran rough, was hard to start, wouldn't idle or else it tried to idle at 1500 rpms all the time, it was terrible. The LTD II with EFI, you turned the key and it started, and ran perfectly. At 100 degrees or minus ten.
Really, EFI is bound to take over for nearly all small engine equipment (other than weed wackers and some push mowers) because it's not that complicated, makes the engines run better, use less fuel AND make cleaner exhaust. And yeah, it's a good sign that there doesn't seem to be any common issues with the EFI systems. After all, it's NOT a new idea, in fact it's a simplified implementation of an idea that's been in used for decades with complete success.
The two most commonly used words in this whole forum are, I think, "carburetor problem".