Nothing in Life is perfect, but trials with other speakers have led to disappointment, so I consider my current speakers as perfect as I should expect.Do you consider your loudspeaker perfect for your personal sonic preferences and perfect for your ears?
However, one question you didn't pose is "Is the TYPE of speaker you use perfect for your room". I guess many people haven't seriously considered this and "make do" as best they can with their existing type of speaker (normally conventional box), maybe by adding sub-woofers or using "room correction DSP" to improve their sound. In my view, resorting to either of these measures means, almost by definition, that your speakers are not perfect in the room you have them installed in.
I learnt to my cost that speakers that should have been a big improvement over my 17 year old Avantgarde Unos failed miserably in my room. They would have been great in many rooms, but not mine. Martin Logan electrostatics need a wall behind them to harvest some of the 50% of their energy being projected backwards – but the floor-to-ceiling glazing is 12 ft and 15 ft behind the speakers and at an angle! So perhaps right speakers, wrong place.
In my own room I should probably be using omni-directional speakers as my dining and kitchen areas are behind the speakers, but the ones I've auditioned (MBL and German Physics, though not in my own room) have disappointed in their imaging abilities - something I rate highly and my current Avantgarde Duo XDs excel at.
There is no "perfect speaker", but perhaps there is a "best compromise" speaker.
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