I somehow intuit that my next phase of audio experience should include at least some degree of dipoleness. I don't have--and nor do I ever expect to have--a perfectly controlled room, plus descriptions of the OB musical portrayal are very appealing. Holographic and natural music experience is my goal (whatever those terms mean to you

).
So, I've watched Danny's and Clayton/New Record Day's videos, read around about various projects and offerings, etc. and I'm frankly finding it hard to fully understand exactly which factors lead to which results across the frequency spectrum; which are unique to dipole implementations; and which combination could work best for my context.
Which attributes buy you which acoustic results? Given limited space and budget, where to most smartly invest?A few examples across the frequency range,
without intending to imply that any approaches are inherently superior:
1. Only >1200 Hz (at the minimum due to Neo3): NX Studio. Not positioned as an OB speaker per se, but claimed to have a fair amount of "OB goodness". Closed bass/mid-bass, requires some kind of sub.
2. Only mids: Statement IIs, Travelers, etc. from Jim Holtz/Curt Campbell collaboration. Also not positioned as OB, mid opens to back via a 6" tube, claimed to add air and soundstage depth. Closed tweeter, ported bass depending on model.
3. Only bass through lower mids, 32-575 Hz: Spatial M3/5 Sapphires. Fully OB-mounted 15" driver on flat baffle, closed sapphire tweeter covers 575 and up. Considered OB.
4. Only bass 20-180/250 Hz is OB, rest is "non-boxy" closed speaker implementations (Gallo, modified KEF), as seen in Vic's entertainingly informative blog:
https://trans-fi.com/diy-speaker-blog. Holy dual 18's per side.

5. All frequencies OB, often with extra subs. E.g., Danny's NX Otica's, Extremes
Some of these choices also have very specific implications (and costs) for driving electronics and amplification as well.

My personal context--a target customer who a) can have drivers at least 3' into the not easily-acoustically-treatable 17' front wall x 20' side x 8' living room, at least for critical listening, b) needs to keep the visual "bulk" of the system way down, c) has a modest budget of maybe $2k (could be stretched some over time), and d) stupidly enough,
really appreciates the impact of deep bass on wide-ranging music styles and low frequency spatial cues.
I do have solid woodworking skills and machinery, at least, and am fully unafraid of unconventional approaches.
Where would you start? Which OB aspects do you feel matter the most and how much of the goodness can you get on limited investment and speaker bulk?
Thanks! And sorry for the long post.
