yeah but the manufacturers are wise to this and try to tune the chassis on the assumption that the driver will react the way most drivers do to an unforeseen "situation". A case in point is my brother's Skyline. It's the R32 version so it doesn't have a huge amount of power and it's only 2WD. It does, however, have 4 wheel steering. We spent a bit of time on Bruntingthorpe with it not long after he got it, on some scrap tyres. I found that when I pushed it too far into a bend, it was remarkably forgiving - up until it snapped and then I couldn't catch it. As soon as we pulled the fuse out of the 4 wheel steer system (I think they call it "Hi-cass"), I found it much easier to catch - albeit at lower speeds.
I think this highlights a big problem these days.
My mate has a 1950 Riley. Bless it, with about 50bhp and weighing in at a ton and a half. It's on a live axle with big cross-ply tyres on it. When you push it too far, it oversteers but it gives you about 3 days written warning that it's going to do so! It's also so under-powered that pretty much as soon as it steps out of line, it scrubs off enough speed to come back straight again.
How many of us learned to drive in cars like this? Morris Minors, Marinas, A35s, Mk. 1 Escorts???
I also had the use of a TVR 390 (the wedge shaped ones) in the early 1990s and again, that was similar but obviously it all happened at higher speeds and it was possible

to maintain a slide for a bit longer than the Riley using the throttle.
The Skyline was a very different animal with it's 4 wheel steer connected. I just wasn't good enough to throw it sideways and hold it there. I gather the later R34 versions with 4 wheel drive can be driven staggeringly sideways almost indefinitely but I've never tried one.
The point is, cars are getting too good for me now. I think I probably speak for the majority of Joe Numpties too. They never get the chance to have a "moment" at relatively low speed and then when they do, it's often only because several layers of computer assistance have already failed in their task to keep him straight and, frankly, he hasn't a snowball's chance in hell of retrieving the situation AND is probably going fast enough to do himself (and others) some serious damage!
I wonder if that's part of the reason why "Ks" remain pretty static but "SIs" are (allegedly) dropping?