This is an argument that has raged for decades in the wine world, particularly between California and France, and part of the problem is that tastes just vary at a personal and national level. But certainly in my opinion - if you want to make a wine that ages truly well, then you have to make it rather unapproachable at first, to provide the raw materials for something that becomes truly special in the bottle.
So it may be unspeakably tannic to start with, and be a 4 out of 10 to drink, in order to have the potential to grow into a 10/10. But it's proved a lot more commercially attractive to start with a more easy drinking wine that's a 7/10 initially, but which only has the potential to turn into a 8/10. In the modern world fewer people want to buy a 4/10 wine and then spend money storing it, in the hope of a 10/10 when they can just buy a 7/10 wine which will soon be an 8/10 wine. Also tastes have changed so that
traditionlists may rate a new-style wine as a 6 but the cool kids say it's a 9.
Obviously beer involves different chemistry, but if a 7/10 beer gives you pleasure and you don't want to wait for it to improve, or your palate doesn't appreciate what happens as a beer ages, then that's cool. On the other hand, here's a chart of a 2014 vertical tasting at the brewery of possibly my favourite Belgian beer, you'll see that their favourites were the 2009 and 2010 and even the 2002 was rated as highly as the new beer, although obviously it would have been good in a different way. And not every beer will age as gracefully as Stille Nacht.