I guess my real point if I explained it better was the benefit of the torque sensors in both some motor-hubs and mid-drive units that match your power more where as a basic cadence sensor on budget ebikes is more of a on/off switch so you only have 4 or 5 power levels unless you also have a throttle control. I think this is why many mid-drive motors achieve a greater range as you can reduce the power to a minimum on flats to give a very subtle level of assistance that takes very little out of the battery.the word 'scale' as in 'they scale the motor support' is a good choice of word.
however, 4 (or more often 5) basic power levels are perfectly good for what we need because within each power level, you can control theoretically between 0% to 100% by varying your input.
There is no real need for more levels. What you want is the maximum power the motor can give is high enough for your toughest hill.
However my own preference is a geared hub as I feel that can be the most efficient of all because when switched off the hub can efficiently freewheel for flats and downhill without power at all and makes the issue of no charge far less of an issue than direct drive and mid-drive units as long as you have a good spread of gears. I realise some mid-drive units do have minimal drag when unpowered in many of the newer models but still seems higher drag than most geared hubs from what I've read.