*Snickers*
You should come here and try to play with my Divabelle and see how quickly she tires of you.
Rabbits are social animals of course but they can also be quite happy just being a bunny and just chew up stuff, destroy things, lounge about, etc. Both my girls are way too fond of just being rabbits to really pay much attention to me but Crumble seems to be a bit more cuddly. I do think individual rabbits need different things according to what they like best. For example, our Smores was truly a people-rabbit and wanted nothing less than being with people ALL the time. So he lives in a home where the mum is a stay-at-home mom and they have 2 kids. He gets loads of attention and that's what works for them.
Of course one can argue that my girls are outside and even though we spend time with them regularly, perhaps they just never fell into that people pattern. However, I had indoor bunnies thatwanted just as little of my presence as my current outdoor girls.
For me, I want my buns to be able to stand, jump, bunny500, binky, and stretch/lounge, at all times so in *my* family, my pet spaces must allow that to happen. That doesn't mean that in the past I wasn't limited in space and had smaller cages, so they only got some limitedfloor playtime and that made me a bad bunny owner. I think you can see it in a rabbit when they are happy and when they aren't truthfully. You do the best you can with what you have and as long as those bunnies are happy and well-taken care of, that's 'good' in my opinion.
Personally, I value quality over quantity and base quantity on the individual bunny. There's just really not one single perfect way... Having pets is just like having kids and what one family does is not necessarily what the other family can or wants to do. Does it make one better than the other? No, not necessarily.