While I agree for the most with the comments here, I don't think a lot of the concerns really have anything to do with this driver or the need for it. In fact, I think this is a really interesting, really great addition to Wishon's offerings. If I was a Wishon fitter, I would be excited.
For example, the problems Par4 and Scott have identified aren't with the club/design or the need for it, but rather with the poor, often uneducated, selection process many people use when buying clubs. P4 is absolutely right when he says that a lot of people are going to run out and buy this club simply because its a new Wishon design, and they will be disappointed when the club doesn't produce the results they are expecting. More accurately, as Scott pointed out, people will be disappointed because they didn't see 20-30 yards distance gain or gain any accuracy. But the problem here is the assumption that new means better (i.e., longer/more accurate), rather than asking whether the new offering is suitable.
Wishon's assumption is that his clubs are being custom fit to the golfer. He assumes that the person fitting the club understands club design, understands his/her client's preferences/tendencies/needs, and matches a club to these requirements. This driver has a place in Wishon's lineup, which enables the fitter to introduce it where it will be beneficial.
For people who aren't going through a fitter, they have to understand what this driver is and where it fits. It is probably going to launch low and spin less. You have to decide whether that is something you'll benefit from. And that assessment has to come from knowing your game/tendencies, rather than assumptions about what "golfers like you need." For example, the "optimum launch" stats/beliefs are only a guideline -- a starting point. They're not a rule. There are many slow SS players who benefit from hitting a lower ball flight with more run out. Are you one of them?
(To Scott's point, can a driver get you 25-30 more distance? If your current driver is even close to being right, it probably can't. But if your driver is wrong for you, these gains are available. For example, and this speaks to not making assumptions about what you need or are "supposed" to hit, at the end of this season I put my wife into a new driver setup that gave her easily 30 more yards. She weighs about 97 lbs, is really weak in her upper body, and has a swing speed that is so low it hardly registers. So, I put her in a shorter, light-weight shaft and a 460 cc, 16* driver, right? WRONG. That's what she had before and she hit high, soft landing drives that had little to no roll-out. No, I put her into a little longer, heavier shaft, with a bit smaller, slightly heavier, 11-degree SMT Spectrum head (that's pretty close to this new Wishon head, isn't it?). The change has her using her body a bit more and hitting the ball on a much lower trajectory with a much longer run-out. She's thrilled and can hardly wait to hit her driver.)