I suspect that I'm one of the few people here that have any real-world experience with an EV. I have a lowly Leaf - 120 miles on a full charge.
Yesterday I had a meeting Pittsburgh - 75 miles round trip for me. No problem; started with a full charge in the morning and round tripped with plenty to spare when I got home at 11:00 AM. Knowing that we were having dinner with friends in the city in the evening, I plugged in and was at 100% charge at 5:00 when we left for our friends' house - 85 miles round trip. Got home with 15% charge left and plugged in. I'm not doing anything in the city today so my wife took the Leaf instead of her truck to head into the city for an appointment. Collectively, we do ~75% of our mileage on the Leaf and we both work 35 miles from our home.
Short of a road trip, I think that amount of daily mileage is at least equal to the majority of drivers. I had to charge in between trips but that's always in the back of a EV-driver's mind - "Where am I going to charge next." That'll change as there are more and more place to charge but, for now, it's something to be mindful of. That said, planning a road trip with my Leaf would be like planning D-Day. No thanks, we'll take the truck. And, further, we have a driveway and a charging station at home, so it's easy for us to charge cheaply.
If we only had EVs (coming in February save the FiST which is not a road trip car) and if we had to do a road trip if and I had a EV with decent range (like the Mach-E coming in Feb), I'd need to take a whole 5 minutes before leaving to plan stops ahead of time to ensure no delays that were out of cycle with pee (my wife is lost without her jug of ice water) and meal stops. Pee stops might be a little longer than before but, otherwise, it would be the same trip for us.
Our EV works for us - so well that we're replacing our daily ICE with another and will be getting a F-150 EV when they are available with no hesitations. I equate the angst that modern-ICE drivers perceive of trying to find someplace to charge with that of folks worried about trying to find someplace to buy gas rather than just unhitching their horses and letting them graze and with that of future EV drivers worrying about where to find hydrogen for fuel-cell cars.