Of all of the citing of what other airlines are doing, the only one that makes me think it is possible is BA. Why would QF be inclined to follow VA who have gone LCC and have a tiny lounge network over other full service carriers on this particular model? Same with the US carriers who have long marched to their own beat on status and lounge access, why would QF be inclined to adopt US airline standards when primarily competing in Asia Pacific?
BA is the only airline I would consider similar, but I have no way of knowing to what degree IAG and Avios as a revenue-based model contribute to that decision.
I'd love to hear an honest appraisal of why QF would want their established, expensive lounges empty? And before the answer given is the word expensive - QF group already have their LCC, they aren't ceding the business market voluntarily.
The problem for the usual suspects of QF doom and gloom is that unlike the drawn out CR+ chatter replete with anecdotes and no data, this one is binary. It either happens or it doesn't. They're either right or wrong.
We shall see, but until then it is not the model that QF has adopted, unlike that list of airlines repeatedly cited that have. It is better to earn with QFF and benefit from the status quo than to stay with an airline which has made status unachievable to most.
It's like the argument about how VA's WiFi is so superior because nobody uses it, unless they are platinum or pay more than anyone in 2025 would pay for internet on a domestic flight. Some airlines can only make it work if all of their premium status inclusions are unutilised, others are going to make it work by sweating those assets. People can decide if domestic WiFi is worth $30K pa or not. The choice is there, it's not necessarily a uniform position that all airlines are going to adopt.