I don't think this type of comparison really tells very much:
Indiantonike wrote: Just do some trial. Give your pad with your lol-setup to a friend, and then change to any other setup. Your setup is an unskill setup, any begginers will be able to play very well with it ...
Is it easy to use for a beginner? Yep. It's a one dimensional way of playing, so naturally it's easier for beginners - they only need to learn one thing. But, only being able to do one thing is not going to do you much good against a good player; you need to be able to mix things up or they'll figure your game out very quickly. Just because something is easier to use when you're a beginner doesn't mean it's cheesy.
Is it going to help less skilled players win a lot of matches against good players? I don't think so.
If you have 2 skilled players, one using 100 power and the other using something else, will the 100 power guy have an advantage? I don't think so there either.
There are a lot of things you can exploit against them - the hardest part is returning their serve effectively, and forcing them into longer rallies. But once you start to wear them down they're pretty helpless. They simply don't have the option of adapting their games. They have no "plan B".
Time will tell. If you start to see all the top players using 100 power, then you can say it's an advantage. But I think there's a point where the rewards of high power stop paying off.