Agree - but there is a way out - just take some time, try to figure out, what those wavetables sound like, by slowly moving the index forward/backward. It’s more comfortable if there is a waveform display, because we can match “image” and “sound” and recall this kind of correlation. I hope this makes sense 
Many wavetables seem to have:
- sweeps like sin to square, sin to harmonics like a drawbar organ,
- sweeps from one traditional analogue waveform to others
- sweeps of filters and/or resonance etc.
- sweeps from clean sounds to noisy
- bellish sounds of different timbres
- mixture of different timbres provided in intervals, sometimes A/B/A/B
- rebuilt of an instrumental sound like a plucked string
- a series of vowel/formant like waveforms
IMO it takes a lot of time to study the wavetables and to memorize what’s inside - and most important - to develop some feeling, how to make unique use of them. But this time invested pays off with timbres, we can not do with other synths.
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