Electric definitely has a place. I think cars like the 918 Spyder are a great way to use electric propulsion to both maximize performance and economy at the same time. I would have no problem putting an electric car in my driveway (especially for use by my wife, who is not a car person) once the prices come down and the range goes up.
It has a place, for sure, I just think it's a completely different basis of appeal.
The best way I can describe it is to take a high end digital watch, then a high end mechanical watch, in many ways the digital watch is better (less maintenance, holds the time more reliably, etc), but it cant offer the same enjoyment as the mechanical watch, the view of and sound of the tiny gears and springs doing their job, producing a feint but telltale tick, it just has a much more tactile and earthly feel to it.
It's the same way for engines, a good driver can communicate with their vehicles engine, reading the tone, pitch, vibration and temperatures to know, at all times, how the engine is doing, if it's laboring and would benefit from a lower gear or if it's stretching it's legs and would be happier with a little more gas, in addition to that, braking system and traction control aren't entirely overbearing, giving you feedback from all four wheels at any given time.
That communication with the driver at all times is what gives combustion engine vehicles their soul, it's a constant conversation.
For electric vehicles, such as the tesla, a huge portion of that conversation is lost, and instead of communicating with you directly, it instead gets displayed in a much more dumbed down form on the vehicles dash display, taking away much of the positive control and feeling from driving, and when you start adding on features like autopilot, what you've essentially done is written off driver interaction completely and bought a private taxi.
Hybrid vehicles are somewhere in between with many leaning towards full-electric approaches towards driver interaction, and that's a damn shame because if we ever reach a future where everyone drives full electric vehicles, the art of driving will be lost, replaced with what amounts to little more than knowing what buttons to press on the UI.
I would never begrudge someone their love for an electric vehicle mind you, I just don't think manufacturers releasing combustion engine vehicles have much to worry about any time soon, because I would wager i'm not unique in my love for them.