The upward toe release is a protection factor in a set of rather rare falls. In addition to the backward twisting fall, falling straight back also exposes the knee to potential ACL rupture. This is an uncommon injury because most people do not fall straight back, the physics don't typically align right for that mechanism. It does, however, happen, and often at slower speeds. The decision for the consumer is whether to protect against this rarer fall, or to opt for more retention to protect against pre-release in potentially more hazardous conditions.
In the straight-back fall, rearward movement of the heelpiece (the forward pressure spring) combined with some vertical play in most binding toe wings accomplishes much of what the vertical release would, just not at standardized, consistent and measurable levels of force.
[/pseudo-scientific response]
"I know you believe you understand what you think I said, but I am not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant."- Alan Greenspan
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