Agreed. I'm not a V2 owner, but I built a Trident. The V2 is a little overhyped, IMHO.
In the end, it's just a matter of your own personal taste though. If you want a highly aesthetic printer with complex mechanics, go for the V2. If you like to keep it simpler without sacrificing much, go with the Trident.
If you are fine with a smaller device, the V0 may be the right choice. You could reinforce the frame and do a few other mods to achieve insane (yet experimental) print speeds. 1500 mm/s is doable.
Both are solid choices, you won't be upset either way, I was 50/50 on both but decided to do the v2 for 350x350 print area. I have an enclosed mk3s that I use as well, I was putting together a buildtak surface (which I swear by for abs and nylon) for my mk3s and snapped this photo to compare print area size. I still want to do a trident (and maybe convert my mk3s to a switchwire) but I'd build it to match the MK3s wrt bed size and I'd totally consider a bowden extruder.
All that said, it is markedly faster than the mk3s and I'm definitely no where near pushing it to its limits. There's a lot to build but I would call it difficult, racking the gantry and belt tensioning being the parts I spent the longest time on. I limit to 24 mm^3/s even though I could go faster, it still just absolutely flies with something like a 0.8mm nozzle. My only other headsup is that modding it is addicting, I've thrown on titanium backers and a kinematic mount for the bed, have a whole bunch of other ones in the pipe as well.
Big thing for me to do a prusa-sized trident would be the ability to share surfaces between it and my mk3s. 350^2 is nice, I don't fill it all that often but it's nice to have the ability to print larger objects.