A BIOS display needs to have universal compatibility, per the hardware. Needing to remove the GPU and reconfigure the hard drive security to get BIOS display is excessive effort for the user. With my GPU/monitor combination, the Visual BIOS (original and 0450) looks great. If I like, I can set the monitor to wide zoom, and the Visual BIOS still looks great. Now of course the esthetics of the Visual BIOS is a great improvement over the traditional BIOS appearance, and so it should look as good as possible for any GPU/monitor combination, i.e. resolution. Towards that end, in so far as the Visual BIOS is sophisticatedly advanced, it could provide a few resolution choices to the user, with the usual "Keep this configuration Yes No(default)" message. But the default resolution needs to be at least usably legible (or visible!). Since the Visual BIOS already had that, apparently, it should not be discarded.
The utility of a computer's BIOS is the first concern. I suppose for users who experiment often with overclocking and different configurations, good appearance contributes to utility. I am more of a "set it and forget it" type of user. I wish I could say I have enjoyed using this motherboard's BIOS as much as I have looking at it.