Ever wondered why even the most famous of all dive-bombers, the Ju 87 Stuka, wasn't employed as such much after mid-1942?
The dive-bomber's main asset was its ability to hit a small or otherwise difficult target, such as a moving one - and its main weakness was its predictable and easily-tracked dive-path. In the early days of the war, the shock to morale of those beng dive-bombed was such that they often ducked for cover instead of shooting back, and the frequent lack of effective close-range mobile AAA meant they didn't have much to reply with anyway. Where those conditions remained the same later in the war, dive-bombers still had their place, not least the Lend-Lease Vengeances operated by the RAF over Burma, where the type was highly regarded - but when AAA and fire-control improved, particularly with the arrival of radar-control and improved ship AA armament, the Stukas and Vals fell in droves.
Allied dive-bombers remained effective a while longer against Japanese ships with little or no radar and weak CAPs, but the dedicated dive-bomber's day was really done by 1944, even the Curtiss SB2 Helldiver often bombing at a shallower angle than that regarded as true dive-bombing.