An offtopic aside: if you enjoy the feeling of mechanical switches and buttons, you might be interested in the plethora of machined metal fidget toys that now exist. You can rub together two or three machined pieces of metal held together with small neodymium magnets in a strangely satisfying way. There are haptic coins, clickers, spinners and the like. Expensive limited models are made by companies like Lautie, and there is a huge range of handmade and factory made ones on Etsy.
Yes, hours of entertainment from these finely crafted mechanical things.

I was attracted to the X-Pro1 because it has an optical viewfinder. I never use the EVF.
Yes, me too! And when I use it with the xf 1.4/23 I use the OVF, but with the Zuikos it isn't a good idea, so I use the EVF with them.
So, aside from the discrete external controls on the X-Pro1, the hybrid viewfinder was another attraction.
The best use of the EVF is with close-up subjects. When you have such a situation there are three choices:
1. Use the OVF exclusively and rely on the camera to adjust its projected framelines. Rely on the focus-square to confirm focus. The very big problem here is that at about three feet or closer, when you see that square light up green to confirm focus, it may be focused on something else: something close to your subject
angularly, but at a much different distance. Example: focus on a flower bud, get the confirmation, but due to parallax the point of focus is on something three feet further away. Using the EVF will show you where the focus really is.
2. Use the OVF, but enable the parallax-corrected focus point. This presents you with two squares: your normal focus square and a second one that shifts to show where the real focus is. At infinity they overlap; close-up they are quite separate. A good idea, however in use I found it too cluttered.
3. Use the OVF for most subjects, but use the EVF for subjects within three feet when you're doing careful and precise framing or focusing.
I've chosen the third option, and that allows for other options as well. Not many realize this, but you actually have
four viewing options on the X-Pro1. You use the DISP button to toggle between Default and Custom and you use the front lever to toggle between OVF and EVF. This gives four combinations, listed below.
The wonderful thing is: once you've chosen a preference, for example, Default OVF and Custom EVF, then toggling the front lever preserves the choices even across power cycles.
The choices:
1. Default OVF. You cannot add or remove viewfinder information. This view presents a very clean minimalist viewfinder. I use this most of the time.
Default EVF. Again, you cannot add or remove viewfinder information. This view presents a very clean minimalist EVF viewfinder.
Custom OVF. Here you can add whatever you like to the display: focus scale, exposure compensation, gridlines, dozens of things. Everything is customizable.
Custom EVF. Again, everything is customizable.
The way mine is set up, when I select the OVF with the front lever, I get the Default OVF display - minimalist and uncluttered. When I select the EVF with the front lever, I get my Custom EVF display which shows me the actual focus point, distance scale, full exposure information, ISO, battery level, and maybe a few more things. It's got what I need but still isn't too cluttered.
Fuji did an amazingly good job with these cameras.