I even partly agree with you about pips. I didnt really enjoy to play against pips often. But if you want to progress in TT you should overcome it, by more practice. If you play just for fun - yeah, pips are pain in the ass, it can be very then unpleasant experience to play against them. Does pips will help you to gain some extra wins exp on a lower levels, definitely yes.
I was playing an amateur tourney one time, with no strict rule set (no one checking an equipment of players I didn’t check opp racket before the match ), and one dude was playing with totally dead 2 $ racket with broken handle that was about 15 years old. The guy didn’t even notice it. The sponge, the rubbers were dead totally, in some part they were separated from the blade. And he giving me the most hardest match of that tourney, and the most weirdest ball trajectories that I ever saw - like playing against broken, kinda retarted antispin but worse. I was down 0:2, and I was thinking in my mind “really? Do I really will lose to a guy with broken handle with all the hours that I put into training? 😄” My sidespins serves didn’t worked, my significant % of loops goes off the table. But I was managed to adapt, changing my strategy, simplified my game and get the win 3:2. Despite all of that, I enjoyed that experience.
Playing against this kind of guys or a pips players, can lead to frustration for first years of playing, but also gives you better feeling and understanding of variety of spins, and teachings you to utilize different strategies, pushing you to adapt quickly. So it’s overall beneficial for your game, even it doesn’t feel so in the process🙂