Man, all valid opinions. (I'm tired and am sitting up in bed because I can't sleep so excuse the following ramblings of this one sleep deprived madman.)
I'm thinking about the D-Lux3... It's been out for ages. Maybe it's time Leica built a flagship compact, like the CM was, and offer something as a "prestige" product that Panasonic doesn't offer. It's hard selling a D-Lux3 when the Panasonic version is sitting next to it, looks pretty much identical etc. Try telling someone that it's worth paying a third more for a product because "the Leica firmware is better."
As for the DMR, if you listen to the fanatics at another forum, you'll believe it's capable of unheard of magic, even after several (three?) years, and better than any of Canon or Nikon's offerings. Truth is, it probably is capable of magic, especially considering the quality of the glass avaliable for it, but it's debatable and subjective opinion as to if it's better than "current" technology in terms of what it's able to resolve all things like lenses being equal. Personally, I find it is amazing that someone can design and build a multi format back / camera, digi and film, let alone produce a small digital chip that senses 10 million points of light! I gues I'm trying to say, the people who bought the DMR are as happy today with the images as they day thay bought it because the files it produces are exactly the same as they always were. Very good, maybe exelent. Maybe the best?...?.... ?.. . .. .
I'm tired and don't know if that makes any sense! Just know I like the DMR, although I've never seen one in the flesh, but I'm also sure technology progresses too fast for most of us to notice how bigger or better things may or may not have got...
Anyway, I'm off topic... Back to the M...
The M8 is a great camera but also a flawed camera.
My story is that I owned it, gave up on it, lusted after it again and now have come to a place of peace a calm and reason. It's the best digital camera on the market for me but I still prefer editing and the process of working with film. I say this because the OP stated that he likes his wide angles and wonders it the M8 is for him considering its cropped sensor. My reply to him is that the M8 is a great digital camera and if he wants a digital rangefinder or a small camera that is a joy to use then get the M8. If the wide angle issue is more important than that, or being "digital" isn't important, then maybe stay with film and see what Leica come up with in the near future.
If I were him, I'd get the M8 😀
Sorry for my illogical ramble.