I would be surprised if many required such a high pixel count I find 24mp overkill for most shooting conditions 50mp isn't something most would need though it will sell cameras
It doesn't matter what you give some folks 50mp or 100mp they will always want more, hence the term "boy racer" no matter how fast the car is 3mph extra is so much faster except it isn't not really
I doubt you will find the move from 36mp to 50mp that big the more mp you have to start with the less you see the extra pixels it's quite small really. 16 to 24mp is barely noticeable even with good primes we're at a level where resolution simply isn't an issue for 97% of shooters.
Depends how big you print.
My large prints with a 36MP sensor (either single-frame or shift-stitched panoramas using a tilt-shift lens) are noticeably more detailed than my older ones with a 21MP sensor and the same lenses.
If you shoot for web or for small print sizes, you may not notice a difference. But it won't be worse, either (even the increased file size can be mitigated by pixel binning) and the greater resolution gives you more options as to what you can do with the image.
It's like anything else in photography - it makes no difference to you unless you're already operating at the limits.
Resolution matters to me because I print at huge sizes. I'm operating at the limit. If you're only publishing to web or making small prints, you're not at the limit and any improvement makes no difference to you.
Low-ISO dynamic range matters to me because I'm already pushing the limits at both ends when shooting high-contrast landscapes. If you shoot in studio and can control your lighting, or mainly shoot in limited-DR situations, it may not matter to you because you're not operating at the limit - if your scene only contains 5 stops of DR, it makes no difference whether your sensor can record 10 or 15 stops.
Colour gamut matters to me because I shoot very colourful scenes. If you shoot in black and white, you're not encountering the limits, so any improvement has no impact on you.
For most purposes, AF doesn't matter to me because it's not even switched on, except on the rare occasions I shoot action. It's nice to have the capability in the camera, though, so I don't have to drag around extra bodies for combined landscape/wildlife trips. If you mainly shoot action, you're at the limit and any improvement makes a difference.
High ISO capability doesn't matter to me because I operate well below the limits of performance - base ISO for landscapes, up to maybe ISO 1600 (very occasionally 3200) for wildlife in dim conditions. If you shoot live music or stage performances, then you're operating at the limit and every extra stop makes a huge difference.
Frame rate doesn't matter to me because I usually shoot at less than 1 frame a second - shooting at that rate, it makes no difference whether the camera can shoot at 4fps or 14fps. If you're shooting sports, then you're operating at the limit and every extra frame per second makes a difference.