It might be a good time to point out different uses of hardware and software.
Hardware is and often used in tracking. In this case most often distortion is being introduced. One could argue that connecting the input source directly to a quality transparent
(transformerless) Mic pre and going straight into digital is actually superior. It just depends on how you look at it. Instead of putting the hardware option on top as the ultimate method the moment you reverse the situation and put a clean signal path straight into digital as the ultimate approach then hardware suddenly looks worse. e.g. for recording a guitar or bass for a rock track then yes the hardware option might sound good. Not for a clean digital synthesiser though. It can make it sound worse. Depends on the music.
Once inside then we can do a lot. I feel that trying to copy old analog gear is actually somewhat silly in some respects. Yes they can get close with some things but not so much with others I agree on that for sure. At least copying old analog stuff is giving us some interesting plugins. Which can be used just as creatively as the original hardware, perhaps in a slightly different way. What is cool is that by starting there and emulating old analog gear has led us into new plugins. What about the new wave of digital plugins that do things old analog gear could never even dream of. In that respect they are leaping ahead. Taking us into territory we have never even explored yet. Amazing stuff. Personally I find that exciting.
Mixing wise you don't need an SSL console either to get a great mix. The fact that many top name engineers are all ITB says it all. When a multitrack is sent out to multiple engineers and the one they pick and love is actually all ITB
(compared to the others that were all done on large consoles with tons of hardware outboard etc) then who cares how it was done. That is talent taking over there, not gear related.
Then there are synthesisers. They are doing an amazing job on those. When they are emulating previous synths they do sound amazingly close, so much so that you don't actually need the hardware in many many cases. But what about those that are going way beyond anything that existed before. e.g. Serum for example sounds like no hardware in existence. It is way ahead in that regard. So on another level the digital software is light years ahead.
There is all analog hardware, all digital and a combination of both. The reality is no one approach is better than the other. They are all great and sound excellent. What is boring is people constantly putting one approach on top and thinking everything else is so much worse. They are stuck in a rut with that thinking. They are all great!
And back to the OP. Yes you can get a beautiful sounding all ITB reverb. There are tons of them out there. Thinking that the only way you can get a nice reverb from hardware is very short sighted. It is up to how you drive that reverb plugin and set it and use it creatively. The solution lies with you not with the hardware or software.
You have got the sculptor, the chisel and the finished piece at the end of the day. We are talking about chisels here!