The realistic scoring numbers are the reason I was drawn to WGT in the first place, so I definitely care about the scores. I was quite sick of shooting 43's on Tiger where birdie is the new par. I would care very much if Augusta denies WGT's request to add their course because they don't want people shooting 53 on it and making a mockery of it. 59 is a sacred number in golf and WGT is the only game that still treats it like so.
It's very likely that players do get different amounts of deviations from round to round. However, the thing to keep in mind is that many mishits are corrected by deviations, so in the long run (not just over 1 round or even 10 rounds) it tends to work itself out. I've been around long enough to collect my fair share of round destroying deviations (see my 76 in Week 29), but I've also managed to conquer the deviations enough to win a load of tournaments and collect quite a few prizes along the way.
In real golf, the best player in the world only wins a handful of tournaments a year. Tiger cannot go out and shoot a 61 every time. Take away the deviations and tibbets will do exactly that. Without deviations, the best player in the world here would win about 85%-90% of the tournaments. Again, not what your sponsors want to see when you're trying to pull money out of them. Not what I want to see as a customer that was drawn in by the claim of "most realistic golf game ever."
I don't want arcade golf. If you want an arcade style golf game then play some Tiger Online, Shot Online or any of the other fine golf games out there and fire 48's and 53's from the championship tees 'til your heart is content. If you want the most accurate (albeit still unfinished) simulation that best parallels what actually happens on a real golf course from day to day, then stick with WGT and watch it develop like the rest of us.
*edit* I just read your newest post and I do understand your side of this. I'm stuck in the camp of it's a lesser of two evils. If the better players get deviation-heavy rounds, then it leaves room for those average players to step up and win when they a get round that isn't so heavy on the deviations. Agree to disagree?