Its been stated before that the TFP method is meant to work for people in a large variety of climates. So adjusting the method to fit your region, and your use of the pool, might be needed or beneficial.
I'm in the north east, I use tablets regularly because the negative of adding more CYA isn't really a negative here. To close my pool I drain the water to just below the return jets, winterize, then fill the water back up to around 1-2" higher than ideal for skimming. When its time to open the pool the water level is either good or needs a touch more. The first water test of the season usually has my CYA levels around 15-25, and the highest I've hit was 70 at the end of the season a week to 10 days before winterizing.
If I had a longer pool season I would be having issues at the end, or would have to be adding liquid chlorine to overcome the additional CYA. And for areas that don't need to winterize or drain for any other reason, it would become a compounding problem. Plus in some areas the cost of water isn't just high, there can be restrictions or penalties for using so much.
You also have to pay attention to what your adding. You mentioned the chlorox blue tablets, theres other tablets that are 7 in 1 or 6 in 1 formulas that add in other junk. They try so hard to advertise these things as, drop these in the pool and the water is perfect, its like magic!
SWGs are widely viewed as the perfect creation around here. And they're awesome, but in some cases like my old and simple pool, the cost to have one installed and add automation to have it turn off when the pool is off, It would take decades for it to pay for itself, instead of like 1-3 years if I was in Florida or Texas.
The best part of this site/forum/people is the knowledge you can get to understand the system, understand how chemicals interact, and then decide how you want to maintain your pool. I've been able to understand why my dad struggled to maintain this pool and what to watch for to avoid the same problems.
Cliffnotes: I'm an evil tablet lover.
