In the scenario "Enemy Coast Ahead" (1943 English Channel warfare), the fighter-plane set was Spit V's, Spit 9's, and Typhoons vs. FW 190A-5's and Bf 109G-6 and G-2.
I flew 190A-5's in that one, and in that mix of planes and in that many-on-many environment, the FW 190A-5 was a marvelous plane. In our 190's, the plane we were concerned about the most were not the Spitfires but the Typhoon. We could generally engage and disengage from the Spits as we chose, but that was not the case with the Typhoon.
In that environment, a more-realistic setup, things that made the 190 a great plane in real life made it great there: roll rate and crisp handling to switch targets quickly or evade quickly; excellent speed among that plane set to allow engaging or disengaging on your terms; excellent firepower, so that even a snapshot could take out an enemy; and sturdiness so that you could take some hits and generally still survive. The Typhoon had many of those characteristics, just not the roll and crisp handling, but it balanced that by more speed and a slightly better set of guns.