That said, it really was damned annoying. I like to port my software to AIX, FreeBSD, Linux/glibc, Linux/musl, NetBSD, macOS, OpenBSD, and Solaris. All of them use a Bourne-like root shell except FreeBSD, and every time I go to upgrade a FreeBSD VM or build a new one I seem to always trip over that at some point. If I used FreeBSD regularly I wouldn't care as much--I'd change the default, or know how to achieve what I want more directly. But not being familiar with FreeBSD, I always end up in a root shell poking around trying to remember how upgrades work, which tools I need to find documentation for, etc, and end up cursing csh for compounding the mental burden.
From my perspective, changing the default root shell is a benefit, albeit very minor. Though, if FreeBSD (and NetBSD and OpenBSD, for that matter) began publishing official VM images, that'd be worth so much more to me.