I think reviews like this, done by someone with minimal experience with FlyQ, but with multiple years of using ForeFlight, can be very deceptive and confusing. I think his intentions were good, but he put a lot of bad information out there. Gee, what a surprise that it's easier to use the product that you're used to... And if you don't bother to even watch the online tutorials for FlyQ, then I would agree that it's going to be a lot harder to do what you want to do with FlyQ. But reverse the situation, and you'd also reverse the findings...
I hear every day "I cannot stand using Android. It is so counter-intuitive." And the other person responds, "You're crazy! The Apple user interface sucks! Android is far more intuitive and easy to use." Of course, statement 1 came from an iPhone/iPad user, while statement 2 came from a Samsung phone/tablet user. In flight instructing, this is called the law of primacy: What we learn first, we remember best. I started on ForeFlight – long before FlyQ came into existence, and know it inside/out and backwards/forwards. But now I'm trying to use both FF and FlyQ, so I can use either in a pinch. Things that were mysterious to me in FlyQ before watching the tutorials are MUCH clearer now. In all honesty, I still think ForeFlight's user interface is the better of the two in most areas, but I'm starting to get the hang of FlyQ, and to be able to figure out where things probably are. And it is unquestionably a "fewer steps to get the answer" solution. Rarely does it take more than 2-3 taps on the screen to get what you need, or to change a setting.
During the time I owned my Commander (Garmin 430W and Avidyne EX-500), I can count on one finger the number of times I was able to successfully update my Jeppesen data without having to call Jepp support to manually "fix" something and allow re-starts. On one occasion, it took about 5 calls to finally get the data updated. (Not to mention that at least one of those updates destroyed the card I was using, so I had to buy a new one – at a breathtaking price! So I'm hoping for the best from the Boeing acquisition, but planning for the worst by re-visiting the FlyQ tutorials, and practicing with it on the ground until I gain the proficiency I have with FF.
If Boeing screws up ForeFlight, as they did with Jeppesen, then I'll just switch to FlyQ permanently, and be done with it. I already have the "lifetime subscription" for FlyQ, so the $$ vote that way anyway!