It is a good way to consider the extremes of the problem-space, which often is a good way to come at a problem.
But a more practical, analogous situation might be: should I buy a nice, warm bagel at the local bagel shop, or should buy it a store and toast it myself? In that trade-off I can take for granted that I'm getting a bagel, but the delivery mechanism, the quality, the integration options, the cost, are things I need to consider.
The decision will depend upon your requirements. If you are organizing an event, maybe I get some bulk catering from the bagel-shop. If you want to use your aunt's bespoke berry jam, maybe you use the store-bought bagel so you easily can use your home spreads.
Identifying the optimal simplicity can be a hard problem, but that shouldn't preclude narrowing down choices with some rough heuristics so that you don't need to investigate the combinatorial explosion of all possibilities, or rethink the system dependencies back to: "first we have a big bang."