Speaking of regen, yesterday I had my bike fully charged when Ieft my home. I live at the top of a 1/4 mile long hill and keep the throttle closed all the way down. I had my bike on Eco mode and noticed that the regen drag jerked off and on down the hill. It did the same thing while coming to a stop at an intersection a short distance further. But on my way back home, after draining the battery pack of a couple of bars, as I was riding down another steep hill, I did not notice the jerking any more. My guess is that the fully charged battery pack was not happy accepting the current created by the strong Eco mode regen until the pack had discharged somewhat. It appeared that the controller was cutting it on and off until pack had been partially discharged.
I might add that I do not notice the same jerking, under the same circumstances, when in Sport mode.
Having owned an electric motorcycle without regen, I can tell you that the Sport mode does generate drag (and I assume power at the same time) when the throttle is closed. My first non-regen GPR-S would really coast with the throttle closed and felt very much like a two-stroke with the throttle off - or a standard motorcycle coasting with the clutch pulled in. There is definitely more drag, even in Sport mode, compared with coasting in "neutral".
Finally, I can tell you that regen provides very little power replacement during your ride, compared with not having it. My second GPR-S had regen set at 100% and the most I ever saw was a 3% power generation over a long ride with lots of hills. Most of the time the power generated was less than 2%. So don't expect regen to extend your range by much. Mostly what it does is to cut down on your brake pad wear and make the bike feel more like a 4-stroke IC motorcycle.
Keep in mind that the vast majority of your ride is with your throttle open and not closed. Even when the regen is activated, the amount of power produced is much less than the amount of power consumed by the motor. Regen helps some, but not much.