Being able to quickly replace broken ESCs out in the other end of the signal cable and program them within 20 minutes so the machine can be ready for the next heat on a competition day for example. While also giving the frame a sleeker more aerodynamic form, from not needing the servo pins any more would be a dream come true.
Let me just comment on this one, as I said earlier, if you take time to plan the wiring you will see that ESC outputs and motor wires are not randomly arranged, but understanding can help you wire it *always* in correct way. I think I wrote this once, but let me repeat. Here is example for quadcopters.
Consider that ESCs have 3 pads/wires. Whatever they are called, doesn't matter, just the ordering is important. First, second and third. Will call them A, B & C.
Then you have motor wires. No, they aren't arbitrarily arranged. There is order, left to right, three of them, call them 1, 2 & 3. They are always like that. No magic involved.
Start from whichever motor you like, doesn't matter. Connect it like this:
A-1
B-2
C-3
Then go to next to the right
A-1
B-3
C-2
Then next (which is same as first)
A-1
B-2
C-3
And final one (surprisingly, same as second)
A-1
B-3
C-2
What can you figure out of this?
1 - Adjacent motors have two of three wires swapped.
2 - diagonally arranged motors have exactly same wiring.
This will make the motor next to one rotate in opposite direction. Just like you need in multirotor (except with odd number of rotors).
When you go to the field, and need to replace burnt ESC. You can spend 10 minutes instead of 20, because you just need to swap the ESC, and you do know exact wiring and that it will rotate correctly. No need for connect to computer and reprogram anything. You can leave your laptop at home.