Hello! New to the forum but not entirely new to Hobie. I've used a handful of their kayaks and sailed on a Wave once.
I currently own a 14' day-sailer, aka a sailing dinghy, but I find that I just don't use it very much. It's just too much work, what with all the jumping around the cockpit, hiking-out, and general gymnastics involved in keeping everything going and upright..

I'm not all that flexible, and my back has issues that are exacerbated by the stress and strain of dinghy sailing. Sitting in a kayak never hurt, though.
After watching multiple YT videos for the AI and TI, I'm thinking it sounds like a lot more fun to sail and lot easier, stable, and forgiving to use. It looks a lot more comfortable, too!
I especially like how you can furl the main when you want to de-power the rig. Having a hands-free propulsion system is nice, too.
My concern, having zero interest in fishing with it, is that it might not work so well as a true sailboat as I might like. Having a headsail and mainsail working together, as I do on my boat, really helps when sailing upwind, and my boat points pretty darn high; a trait I've heard the AI doesn't possess. And understandably, given the shape of the sail, vertical battens, and lack of a boom or jib.
So how high do they point? It's hard to see in the videos what direction the wind is coming from, so it's difficult to tell exactly what point of sail they're on.
I don't imagine you can sail one close-hauled very well, but can they manage at least a close-reach? Can they make decent headway when sailing upwind, or will I spend all my time tacking with the boat very nearly on a beam-reach?
I want a small boat that's easy to store and goes faster without having to hike-out. I've always like multihull boats, trimarans especially, so I'm hoping you 'guys' will convince me this is the perfect boat for me.
Thanks!
TD