I use lazyvim for all my neovim config. Does it fly in the face of the configurability or minimalism of vim? I'd argue no, but rather it is an expected outcome of a highly configurable system. Some people don't want to think about this kind of thing, they just want something that works.
Yes, because neovim != vim :)
> Does it fly in the face of the configurability
Probably not.
> or minimalism of vim?
I'd have to say at least a bit? Which is totally fine if it works for you, but there's gotta be some amount of extra features added after which "minimal" stops being a good description.
Edit: Although, we should also acknowledge that minimalism is a sliding scale. Compared to plain vi, vim is bloated. Compared to a full blown traditional IDE, lazyvim probably is minimal.