I didn't say that I am or will be bothered by it or that it will be Kamila specifically. I'm just making an imo pretty realistic guess that the current favorites will probably be outscored by some current junior in 2 years that will jump even more quads, spin even better, do even more transitions etc.... we (or rather Eteri shall I say) don't seem to have reached the ceiling yet.
When you thought Yulia was a phenomenon with her insane flexibility and wow factor- here goes Medvedeva clean at every competition, gold at everything. Medvedeva is good? Along came Zagitova with her 3Lz3Lo, winning the Olympics. You thought Zagitova was her greatest product? Take some Sasha with 4 quads. Not enough artistry for you? Might I delight you with Shcherbakova's quads+musicality?
Oh now you're tired of "jumping beans"? I present you Alena with sophistication and throw in a little 3A.
Now you want 4s, flexibility, artistry and everything combined? Well I have that little girl called Kamila.. let's see if we can make her do 3A as well.
... and so it goes
I would say this was (or still is) a transitional period. First Yulia, Evgenia and Alina maximized what is possible to get from a program with "classic elements" (all triples, hard 3-3 combos, all lvl4 spins and stsq). That brought an advantage over the rest of the field. hen the era of quads and multiple 3A came. That once again brought the advantage to the next batch of skaters. But in this moment I don't think there is much to go further in the sense of adding difficulty. I mean 1-2 clean quads vs "only" triples can be game changer, but 3 quads vs 4 quads not that much, because the execution counts together with the execution of the rest of the program. So I rather expect some sort of stabilization of those new elements and rather than further complicating of the layout I expect the rush for more clean and better executed elements together with improved artistry and not necessarily the quick change of "generations".