I don't really have a rational explanation. I know of nobody else who is using a similar circuit. However, I am very pleased with the amps I've built with the big ass choke input PS. I know that it's a very uneconomical strategy.
My go to amp sounds great and is fun to play. It's a parallel 12ax7 w/ dissimilarly biased triodes upfront, an early Bandmaster style TB stack, into a 6sj7 pentode with a VVR controlling the screen voltage, feeding a paralleled 12au7 cathodyne PI driving a pair of 6v6's, true choke input PS and a global VVR. It is more of a clean'ish blusey kind of amp, but it's easy for me to get fun overdriven tones at any volume, the controls are intuitive and responsive. It has amazing bass response--in fact bass guitar sounds pretty damn good through it (I generally keep the bass knob around "1")--and never farts out. Plus, it takes pedals well.
I've got another choke input amp which can run either 4x 6v6, or 2x 6L6 and a much more complicated preamp design that I've been working on, but have put aside for a while. It works but has too much gain. I started bypassing gain stages and the active passive fx loop as well as removing cathode bypass caps etc. to get it under control... it works, but it's not quite what I want it to be yet. One of these days I will get back to it.
I've got another project on the bench right now--an all 7 pin tube single channel amp w/out tremolo inspired by an early Gibson GA40 schematic squeezed into a Valve Jr. size chassis.