Well, sure, but then, even BF didn't really help by basically following Moffat's narrowed view of the Time War. None of the Time War audio stories have thus far been particularly memorable, other than by the sheer virtue of having John Hurt portray his Warrior role again before his sad passing.
That's a fair assessment of the War Doctor audios. Hurt elevates that material and brings his costars up a notch, but storywise they felt like Nick Briggs took
Dalek Empire and
Gallifrey, tossed them in a blender, hit puree, and got a gloop that works because John Hurt
makes it work by the sheer force of his voice, not because it does anything new or interesting or innovative with the material and the concept.
The interesting thing, to me, about the War Doctor stories we've had since "Day of the Doctor" (
Engines of War, the audios, Titan Comics'
Eleventh Doctor Year Two, even the little bit of
Season of War I've read) is how they reinforce what the tenth Doctor says in the shack -- "You were the Doctor all along." We focus on the eleventh Doctor saying, "You're the one who broke the promise," but all the material since then has, to my mind, gone out of its way to show that, no, he didn't break the promise. He lost faith in himself, he lost faith in his name, yet at his core he remained the man he had always been.
One unfortunate thing about Moffat's tenure is that he gave us two regeneration stories without the matching post-regeneration stories. As was pointed out in Panini's eighth Doctor graphic novels, a regeneration is a story of halves -- the half leading up to the change, and the half that deals with the aftermath of that change and the new Doctor's discovery of who he is. Moffat's desire to "complete the set" deprived us of the War Doctor's first days and the ninth Doctor's first days. There are events in those second halves that would explain so much about who these men are and how they saw the men they had been. I can invent, in my mind, a psychological portrait of the ninth Doctor in the aftermath of "Day of the Doctor" -- the howls of pain and agony when he realizes that Gallifrey has gone, the lack of specific memories as to
why it's gone, the feeling of contentment that he dimly remembers his predecessor feeling prior to the regeneration, a feeling that he misinterprets and misunderstands in the worst possible way. It's that moment that I think most shaped how the later Doctors saw that part of his life. There are stories there, and we'll never see them. (Though, this year's Free Comic Book Day
Doctor Who comic has what I think is the first official pre-"Rose" ninth Doctor story. So maybe there's hope.)