There is so much complexity built into the app that they have to be extremely careful to not screw anything up. * I'm holding out that the group that took over Quicken did it knowing that there is a niche for this type of software and that they are going to put in a good faith effort to try to improve the application. Two things regarding features and rate of improvements:
Yes, it does have its issues, but from the perspective of getting a complete financial picture, I haven't found anything better. Lots of manual data entry to catch up on transactions that I could no longer download from the various sites.
I quit using it in 2015 for personal reasons but have spent the last couple months recovering from the hiatus.
I have about 25 different accounts (banks, credit cards, investments, mortgages, peer lending, etc.) that have data from 2006 until now.