I don't actually mind the chess that's been played in the match - ok, only 6 games are so have been interesting for me from a chess content perspective (all have been interesting when considering things beyond just the actual moves), but I don't think there was really much left in any of the games agreed drawn and I don't disagree with those decisions. Still, I would rather not see the title determined in some quickplay tiebreaks. And that's even if they are played before the match, which I think introduces a lot of other issues.
Some time back (when the Candidates Matches were going on), I suggested a system to try and avoid quickplay tiebreaks in a match system. Basically, based on the qualifying tournament performances, the higher seed gets draw odds in the match while the lower seed gets an extra white.
I later ran some simulations to show that (under some simple assumptions and depending on the match length) the higher seed would be expected to win around 55-60% of the matches.
I still like that framework, because it pushes quickplay as far away from determining the match winners as is reasonable I think. The same could be said about this match. Draw odds by itself is too big an advantage I think (and it's not exactly an unlikely occurrence, having already happened like 8 times in about 40 WCh matches). At the same time, given that most of the champions/challengers are pretty close in strength, you're not really likely to get any statistically significant result in a match of even 24 games, even if that seems like a long match. So we're not going for any exact result here, but in a 15-game match where Anand has 7 whites and 8 blacks, he's still expected to "win" the match 56% of the time. At the same time, the match is guaranteed to be over with classical time controls, and the introduction of some sort of match-imbalance with colors/draw odds increases the likelihood of more spectator-friendly play.
In other words, I still like my idea.