I like it just fine, the v1 more than the v2, but the Summilux is, to me, just better.
I don't doubt your assessment. But since we're on a thread discussing why we did not buy certain things, I'll address that topic a bit.
What I have been avoiding buying recently is faster lenses -- fewer f1.0, 1.2 and 1.4 versions. I own quite a few of them and still love -- and frequently use -- them when I want shallow depth of field for things like portraits. But, I've gotten kinda tired of images with just the thinest slice in focus and everything else blurred out.
As a general rule it's much more difficult for lens designers to make faster lenses perform as well as their slower brethren. Not impossible, but more difficult and therefore more expensive to correct all those anomalies, sometimes exponentially so.
As a great added benefit and what is so appealing to me, slower versions often have a nice pop to the image quality that the faster ones sometimes lack. Not always true, but often so.
Hard to describe in words, but images produced by these slower, smaller lenses can seem more coherent to me with enhanced clarity and impact. They appear somehow a bit less diffuse and with a more precisely focused feel. I notice this with the venerable Leica 50mm Elmar f3.5 -- a positively ancient design that can produce absolutely stunning images from a nice clean copy.
For these reasons, I just bought an f2 version of a post war Zeiss 50mm Sonnar from a forum member and am waiting for it to be delivered, choosing it over f1.4 or 1.5 versions because of image quality considerations. Also, I've recently picked up two versions of the nice little Voigtlander APO 50mm f3.5. And my favorite slightly longer lens for landscapes and such is the very slow but beautifully detailed three element 90mm Elmar f4.
I'm not denigrating the faster lenses at all. Just making the case for why I sometimes avoid them in favor of their slower, smaller and typically cheaper alternatives.