Are you trying to say you're older than me
I'm speaking of the best of each on the high end.
Nobody does a good old style dome out of modern materials- but the feed from one side, fly attached domes remain the fastest and lightest still for a given weight of poles.
As in- yar you can do all kinds of funky stuff with the hub systems and custom one-off structrual pole sets- but few things as space efficient as the simple dome and that translates in weight of the poles too.
Tents are designed around a footprint, and some pretty standard shapes. While it's true the hub systems can give you a nice little pop of headroom at the peak.. the geometric shape cuts out quite a bit more interior space especially at the edges or foot area. A dome doesn't do that.
If you got a 4'x 7' dome tent you mostly have the full footprint worth of usable space.
On the other extreme is a pyramid... a 4x9 pyramid is about the smallest practical size... and that's a minimalist solo.
The clip systems end up someplace in between.
This tent used to weigh 2lbs 4 ounces. 10 or 15 years ago.
https://www.rei.com/product/735254/t...e-rock-22-tent
The hub and clip systems look cool. A few of them are cool.
But a straight run of the newest SUL DAC poles in combo with a classic sleeve dome in some of that 1 oz or under Big agnes fabric would be pretty sweet.
https://www.rei.com/product/111797/b...-platinum-tent
That's one of the hot ones... and it weighs more than The North Face hotties from 10+ years ago.