As far as not making lighter weight mountain sleds for the shovel crowd..... I think that fad is already fading.
I see the opposite here in my limited view. The winters have been degrading, and even when the slow does fly it just melts within a few days or weeks. People in this region, at least the 8-9 guys I ride with, started out by going to crossovers trying to have a sled that they could ride around here when there actually is snow, and try to take out west a few times a year. That very quickly transitioned into going all-in on full mountain sleds. There is always snow there.
10-15 years ago when all those EPA regulations went into effect the 2 smokes were blowing up or starting on fire left and right from the other 3 players in the game. Yamaha went 4 stroke and made something extremely reliable. All machines have their issues and everything can and will break. During that period however, the Yami's were the choice for reliability, and you sacrificed the handling that the other 3's chassis provided nearly out of the box. You had to sink piles of money into the outdated designs of the Yamaha chassis to get them to rail the trails like the 'other' guys sleds out of the box IMHO.
I jumped on the 2014 Viper when it came out, trading in my beloved Apex for it because I just wanted a more modern, rider-forward style chassis with the reliability of the Yamaha motor. The problem is, its a Cat. The fit and finish just isn't what I had come to expect with something that had the Yamaha name branded on it. I realize that there have been some improvements in the Yama-Cat since then, but in the end, we are just riding 'cats with a Yamaha motor. That seems to be the Future for Yamaha sleds, and I cant help but feel like Chris Reeds retirement/blog closure wasnt a symbolic foreshadowing of this.
I absolutely HATE to say it, but unless something changes in the next couple of years, its starting to look like my next new sled will be a Doo.