All those call to actions are the bare minimum I'd expect of an IDE, nothing gives a unique selling point.
> It highlights source code syntactically and semantically, lets you easily refactor code, with a range of handy and powerful tools.
That's table stakes. Otherwise it's just notepad.
IntelliJ has me scroll down the page, but I then get a breakdown of what USPs IntelliJ thinks I a developer would be interested to know about, like it's refactoring and code completion, that it has specific integrations for frameworks. Testimonies, and new features are listed on that page. Not buried elsewhere.
VSCode, immediately shows that it's USP, it's extensions ecosystem, in the screenshot on the landing page and then covers some other minor USPs in brief segments.
Even Sublime Text, updated once every blue moon when Mars is in retrograde, understands that showing off USPs and the developer experience is key.
Now I used Netbeans for years, but only because I was exposed to it in the university computer labs. I've only had to go back to it to fix a JavaFX app we got landed with, and I can't say I was too impressed at how well it integrated with maven, having to ditch out and use the command line to get proper bundled builds to work.