The impression of detail can be heightened or reduced through many mechanisms - frequency response, time alignment, phase response, resonance/vibration management, etc. For example if you boost treble/upper midrange there will be more apparent detail, same if you reduce midbass. If you do the opposite you will get more warmth and less detail. Too much and you get into muddiness. By changing driver alignments you will also affect the impression of detail. Changing the spikes/support on your speakers also.
It's not just speakers, all the way through the chain, the design choices determine how much detail you perceive and how it is organized. If I swap the AC output phase of the Power transformer in any of my equipment I will get more perceived detail at the expense of smoothness and coherence.
Sure, we cannot have it all, we need to chose from:
how flat a frequency response
how extended the frequency response - e.g. 10hz to 50kHz
how high the sensitivity
how important is the radation pattern
does coherency matter (time alignment, phase coherency, crossover design)
ease of drive
the rigidity of enclosure
the size of the speaker
the speaker cosmetics
My friend values coherency above everything else, so he chose to sacrifice frequency extension and flat frequency response and went for a "full range" single driver speaker. He also got good sensitivity and an easy to drive impedance allowing the use of small powered SET amps which are extremely involving musically.
Coherence is also very important to me, but I cannot live with a single driver speaker. I need more extension (35Hz to 18KHz) and a flatter frequency response. I therefore go for either a 2-way or very carefully designed 3-way.
As you go for greater frequency extension, the requirement for more drivers increases and you have to sacrifice other variables such as cabinet size, easy to drive impedance, sensitivity, etc. More drivers and bigger cabinets requires greater engineering to have rigid cabinets, and the crossovers get very complicated. Less efficient, low impedance speakers require massive power amps that in themselves tend to be missing in the musicality stakes
That's great!! You are happy and enjoy the hobby along with the excitement for your future upgrades.
I have only been in the hobby for 50 years. I have worked in both the hifi industry and the pro/recording side. I have friends that are reviewers and designers and have learned a lot from them. I hope to stay humble enough to keep learning.
I know what I want from my music system and very satisfied with my current gear - I am particularly sensitive to rhythm and timing and musical flow. I do upgrade, but these are usually small things (e.g. I just changed the RCA connectors on my ICs from brass to NextGen Copper, and the feet under my power amp)
I got into DIY 30 years ago and learned a lot quickly by making every mistake in the book. I have a favourite pair of 2-way monitors (1st order linear phase) designed by Chris Bryant and Martin Colloms which do most of what I value. I have build external crossovers for them and have used the highest level of parts connectors, and wire.
My end game speakers are a 3-way speaker that I have been building myself for the past 13 years (I spent a year on them, got interrupted and then started again during our famous Melbourne CV lock down). This is my attempt to do everything that is important to me, that no manufacturer does.
Coherency comes first so a full range Supravox driver operating from 180Hz to 6KHz, a Wolf Von Langa 15" bass 30Hz to 180Hz and Seas Exotic Alnico 1.5" tweeter from 5Khz up. The crossover is external, 1st order with the best parts. The Supravox is open baffle for reduced cabinet coloration and all the drivers are time aligned. The sensitivity is 94db with an 8ohm load and the phase is within +/- 20deg.
I am continually experimenting with the fine tuning of these, but they do what my mini monitors (a bit better) plus they scale better, go lower and are more dynamic. They don't go below 20Hz and they don't go above 20KHz.
I go to shows (always a disappointment if you expect good sound) and visit a lot of other people and am always open to learning.
Sorry this response is so long