I think it could sound good... but is it honestly as good as the amp cranked up with your cab getting a healthy dose of voltage?
It's just different. You don't get the speakers pumping of course, but then who actually plays at that volume regularly anyway? And does everyone actaully want speakers flapping?
No I agree with you... but I think the sales jargon with power scaling and similar features is more often than not about obtaining 'that cranked tone and bedroom level' which to me means cranked amps pushing speakers, but that sales speak is really just a bunch of cool words that sounds good in a magazine... but isn't it always?
I think if people set out to get 'that cranked tone' at really low sound levels it's just inevitable that it won't be the same... though it could still be good. You and me know this, as does most of the forum probably. The marketing of the ideas is what I can't always stomach. Before power scaling similar phrases were probably used when discussing PPIMV's or Attenuators, and we know neither of those are ideal solutions to playing quietly in your bedroom but sounding cranked ("quietly" isn't really quantitative or a recognized reference level).
I'm not really talking about blasting the speakers out, compared to really quiet levels either. I'm only talking about the range from where your speakers start to sound good compared to not really driven. Still loud, but not '75% output from a 100watt head loud'. Resistance of the speakers varying at different frequencies and all, stands to reason there is going to be a point where the speaker response isn't that good in relation to how they are driven, and that doesn't need to mean driven to loud gig volumes...but more than likely loud for 'in your flat' volumes.
Playing really quietly into 4x12 doesn't have to sound bad... even without power scaling, PPIMVs or attenuators. It doesn't have to sound bad even when using a 100watt amp to do it either. Though it's not very convenient.
I should probably say, that all this probably varies with the style of amp. High gain master volume 100watts are probably going to produce different results in conjunction with the low output ideas compared with non-master volume amps with lots of headroom.
still... if anyone has tried the Rebel 20 and wants to let me know if the Watts pot works well, or if it sounds scratchy, I'd like to know.