Ok, but in my usage of heavy aircraft since the patch (777 and 747-8), I've gotten consistently worse results from using the default pushback option compared to the previous patch.
I highly doubt the previous version would have been able to push an airplane that large perfectly, it would surely make a somewhat larger curve.
Again, I can only refer to my test using the default Singapore scenery, which is a very simple parking so no, in that case, it's not a question of GSX having changed the default pushback because, what might have changed, would only possibly affect 3rd party sceneries with a lot of nodes close together but, in the default scenery I tested, there wasn't any alternative so, nothing in the update could possibly affect this, and the pushback was reasonable, but not "perfect". That would require a customization even in a previous version, a customization that is now easier and more flexible so on, even the previous version couldn't do a perfect pushback with no customization.
But as I've said, several times by now, on a 3rd party scenery with many more nodes than a default, something might have changed, and of course for the better, because it might have resulted in errors and crashes in the previous version, mabye in OTHER airports. So, clearly, it's more important to prevent crashes, and this might possibly affect the default choice of nodes on some 3rd party airports, when there are many of them to choose from.
This doesn't mean it will fail every time (as your experience notes), but it now means I should probably just go ahead and set up a custom pushback for every flight. If it used to work fine 90% of the time and now it works maybe 50% of the time, I might as well not take my chances with it.
As I've said in my previous message, it works fine with the current version, and it doesn't show any of the problems you reported. It's not by any means perfect, but it's absolutely reasonable. The the whole point of having a customization to begin with, is for those wanting to change "reasonable" into "perfect", which is clearly possible now, and it wasn't before.