^ & ^^
Let's conflate two two ideas: people hear sound differently and for different reasons. Also, everybody, to some extent, hears in a different range, and some folks have poor hearing (medically speaking, but also upon a range - they just don't have the physical hearing capacity that most/many other folks have). Now, I'll add, it's very frustrating when people refuse to use their brain, think for themselves, research information for themselves from a variety of sources because they'd rather read a tweet then follow the heard they've aligned themselves with. Of course, this is a known feature of a place like Youtube (and most social media) - it doesn't have to be that way, and folks use social media for different reasons in different ways, but it's well known/well researched that the majority of folks use social media to reinforce their bias; i.e. they'd rather go to a site/poster with views they align with and just take the tweet/post as gospell rather than research, fact-check, find new ideas, and be challenged.
Thus, we have - and I think, in retrospect, this is my original point that I would have liked to have made, and now you folks have helped me to make it:
1) Some folks don't hear difference in sounds for whatever reason - this may be good bad or indifferent, but there is difference in sounds, and they simply are not able to notice all the information; they simply hear a subset of the information. They may want to do that ("all I want is a tele sound"), or they may not ("I cannot hear a dime of difference").
2) Heard mentality/cognitive dissonance/low attention span/lack of willingness to personality research and learn is rife around social media.
I'll stop there and just keep to this narrow example: it's strange when a thread seems to have been hijacked by a heard mentality who don't want to hear a difference even when it is clearly there. This group are seen as the majority (of comments of the Youtube post, in this case), and thus influence/bully/dominate the entire discussion in a "non-truthful" manner.
It frustrates me: very few people were highlighting elements of the sound (which were either the same, different or something else).
Our discussion here is much more interesting with varied opinion because people are engaging their brain.