A big consideration for many with a ~100 ski is travel, the need to have one or at most two skis on a plane that can do as much as possible. This width ski for many fits the bill. For non-flyers, that ski width has to do more specific things that vary from person to person a bit, I gather.
For some years I avoided this width, as too wide to be a very top carver, and too narrow to be a top powder ski either.
I've had ~100 skis that floated well in powder of most any depth, up to almost bottomless. But their relatively narrow width made them either now and then less stable or less able to rise up enough to be optimal fun in the deepest snow.
And I've had ~100 skis that didn't really float, but busted through instead, more in than on the snow. The best of these floats enough to work and be playful and easier for powder, but also is stiff enough to crud bust, and be top fun in up to, say, 6 inches of fresh. And it rails on groomers.
To me, the K2 Mindbender 99 works for this, and the Bonafide almost works: it is stiff enough to be optimal fun crud busting, but not flexible enough to really rise up enough in more than, say, three to four inches.
Those are my top two at this width. (I have them both.)
I'd have said that for me the Enforcer 100 was best in class for the off piste and powder of most any depth, and it is a super crud best bet, maybe the best at this width; but for me its tail up to the most recent change has been too vague carving, especially on the day after powder, or on groomers. Nordica has solved that weak tail problem and to me the Enforcer is now a strong candidate here, but I've heard that it has lost some of its versatility off piste and in bumps with so much new precision, so not sure.
The Stockli SR 95 is good too, and better at what it does, but different: it is on the bottom carving in up to 4-6 inches, busting crud carving perfectly. But it is down in the snow, not rising up as much, not that kind of playfulness to it. To me it almost wastes the powder: it's a bit as if it wasn't there for this ski.
P.S. At my age, I'm not much of a bump (except in powder) or tree skier, in terms of time spent, so my preferences reflect that.