I think having both around is a good balance.
[0] https://www.stm.info/sites/default/files/media/Stminfo/image...
[1] https://www.stm.info/sites/default/files/media/Stminfo/image...
Back when the SuperBowl was in NYC there was a full transmit map produced that acknowledged and displayed the existence of New Jersey and its transit into and out of NYC. After the Super Bowl the MTA quickly took it down and New Jersey was returned to its former “we’re gonna pretend like you don’t exist” map.
(It's going away at the end of this year.)
New Jersey requires the map to be shifted to include it, which means either going to a larger map, or shrinking the existing content of the map. There's a cost to doing so, and that cost may not be worth the extra benefits providing that information would.
If I tell them about something in NJ, they look at me as if I’m talking about Alabama.
Miami or Los Angeles is mentally closer to them than Jersey City.
But I can see a New Yorker preferring the new map to get just the subway lines and connections.
IMO, locals don’t really look at transit maps since they have them memorized and only travel the same few lines regularly.
It’s tourists that are unfamiliar with the lines that need to read these maps. They also want to know the distance between stations.
So it becomes the question: who is the transit map made for?
It would be great if, in addition to providing realtime bus and train info, the MTA provided realtime station info so third parties could create maps in any style that were guaranteed to be correct because they would pull from live station data.
That's what the Google maps data is based on.
Being able to determine relative distances also helps you decide whether it's worth waiting for the next train, or whether to switch from an express to a local or vice-versa.
Cool, Accessibility features always improve the user experience.
You just use the rule of thumb 2-3 minutes per station and problem solved.
Detailed track/junction map. (Not my own content).
https://www.mta.info/press-release/mta-unveils-first-fully-r...
The maps: