There's a spectrum. On one end you have people who pay zero attention to features and just buy whatever is "hot" or whatever is the latest iPhone. On the other is your "get off my lawn" types, still clinging to an LG V20 or maybe paying a ridiculous price for a Sony phone that has what should be basic features.
I think most of us fall towards the latter end. We hold out as long as we can but when these basic features are removed from 95% of the market your choices get real fuckin' slim, real fast. And ultimately things like security updates, competitive pricing and functional batteries get the better of us.
I love that my pixel 4a has a headphone jack. I'm overdue for an upgrade but I know I'm going to lose my fingerprint sensor and jack. Yeah it's a security risk but this phone still works and performs well. I hate stupid planned obsolescence. I wished tech was more about stability and long life. But I guess that doesn't make enough billions in revenue.
Those have any long lasting issues? My old 5a had the motherboard go. Trying to find a suitable replacement. Going back a generation wouldn't be terrible if it's reliable.
IR blasters are fine, so few TVs even use them now. Storage, eh, 512 is default these days and I'm only using 25% of that (assuming you meant storage and not memory).
Headphone jacks and replaceable batteries are huge though. I'm still pissed about that.