Personally I find the dismissal of EV complexity an insult to the engineers that work at it.
So, I'm looking under the hood of a car with an IC motor and I see this small brick?!?! I look a little closer and it's a BATTERY!?!?! What's it doing in an IC vehicle?? I thought those things run on Dinosaur juice. I follow the cables and discover that this battery is connected to a small ELECTRIC motor and there is a little box with some electronics in it and it CONTROLS the voltage from this battery and turns the electric motor. Seems this electric drive train hiding in the IC vehicle is required in order to get this Rube Goldberg machine started! And it's been there for decades! Who knew that ICE drive trains were so complex they need an electric drive train added just to get moving in the first place!
So I realize, just get rid of the rube goldberg machine....add more batteries....make the controller and the motor bigger and BOOM...pure electric EV....MUCH simpler. I get rid of a ton of extra moving parts that are prone to failure and the car still works great and its quieter!
Complex engineering does NOT equal a complex machine. What makes a machine complex?!?!
Well....let's take a look at the guidelines for a Rube Goldberg Machine competition...
A step in the machine is a transfer of energy from one action to another action. Identical transfers of energy in succession should be counted as 1 step.
Example: A sequence of dominos hitting each other should be counted as 1 step. Counting 100 dominoes as 100 steps is repetitive and not in the spirit of Rube Goldberg.
Cool....so just add steps that use energy and thus make the machine less efficient.
How efficient are ICE? 18%-20%
How efficient is an EV? 85%-90%
Sounds like the EV is much simpler.
The fact that an EV is a marvel of engineering does not make it complex and I don't know a single engineer that will get insulted if you tell them the design of their machine is simple and elegant....more likely they will get a smile on their face....unless they are competing in a Rube Goldberg Machine contest in which case you might as well have just punched them in the face!