Class D is even finally invading the guitar amplifier market (and not those cheap 'modelling' amps that started to show up about 15 years ago). Audiophiles don't like this fact, but the guitar market has been keeping tubes alive far more so than the audiophile market! As class D invades the guitar market its going to put a huge dent in the bottom line of tube producers. Things are going to look very different in 10 years!
https://www.henriksenamplifiers.com/2019/04/22/amplifying-quality-instruments/
From the article (highlight added):
Tube amplifiers are the oldest of the technologies, and their design is an art unto itself — every little thing matters including where wires are placed when connecting components together. Solid state power amplifier architecture uses a transistor as opposed to a vacuum tube, reducing weight, size, cost and maintenance, but requiring more complex circuits. Most recently, class D amplifiers have become more available and are the predominant amplifier on the market for acoustic instruments as they put out the most efficient power. In the beginning, class D amplifiers had both quality and fidelity issues as well as noise problems when applied to instrument amplifiers (as opposed to consumer audio applications), but those problems are largely a thing of the past.
When designing an amplifier for acoustic instruments, or any instrument where you do not want the signal to contain any distortion, you want as much power as is practical. The more power you have, the more volume and dynamic control you can get from the instrument without mud or distortion; however that brings with it size and weight.
Class D amps are the most economical way to do this, but can be missing the analog warmth you get from a tube amp design. As with the preamp, this is where designs need the attention of the designer’s ears as much as anything.
If weight is not so much of a concern, then a well-designed tube amp can deliver a few things that aren’t possible with even the most sophisticated digital circuitry. One of the unique characteristics of vacuum tube technology is that tubes can produce harmonics naturally. Why might this be important, and doesn’t this constitute some type of distortion of the input signal? A purist would say yes – it’s harmonic distortion, but when you take into consideration the loss of the “total” sound and nuances that a single-point pickup system doesn’t deliver to the amp, then it’s a reasonable trade-off.
When playing your favorite acoustic guitar, you’re hearing all kinds of sounds coming not just from the sound hole, but from the sides, the back, the neck and the strings themselves. A lot of the complexity of that sound is lost when you use a single-point, or even a dual, pickup system that samples the sound from a very narrow space on the guitar.
Vacuum tubes help by reintroducing some of the harmonics that are lost, giving a very natural sound that has a certain sparkle to it.