I'll say this much. DVD's made me retroactively hate VHS for 2 reasons. They get eaten up and destroy both player and tape for one thing (though DVD's ain't exactly durable either. One scratch and its history), but mostly for the fact that, overall, DVD's are cheaper for what you get.
And streaming makes me not so fond of DVD's either, now that I think about it.
I honestly have a huge beef with VHS on account of what kind of VHS I'd buy. Yep. Cartoons and cartoon compilations. I'd HATE having to fast forward and rewind to watch one cartoon. Especially if I bought a Nickelodeon compilation video. I'm glad that Road Trip had Rocko and Ren and Stimpy close together so I didn't have to search all over the video for it. Unlike a compilation tape that had an episode of Doug (the only Doug I had on VHS by the way) that had a Rugrats cartoon, and a big honking Hey Dude in the freaking middle of it.
On that ground of being able to search for a single episode with a click of the remote, I find cartoon DVD superior to tapes. The other thing being, well... I remember having to pay 10 bucks for 2 measly Darkwing Duck episodes. I got both DVD's released as gifts, but they were under 25 bucks for 30 eps. That's why I go nuts when they still sell any single disk DVD's less than 5 episodes for 10 bucks (which is still a bargain).
Now, I'm going to consider this. Unless the kids' parents are just old enough to still have a VHS collection, and provided they have a working VHS player, the kids aren't going to know or care about what they are. Though everything references VHS now, so they shouldn't be completely in the dark about it.
There is never going to be any perfect technology. Everything will have some kind of glitch, but we try to make the best of them.
Back around 1984 or so, when there was a video store on every corner (just before Blockbuster, there was a glut of mom-and-pop shops) it was cheaper to rent than to shell out sixty, seventy, eighty bucks to own your own copy.
DVD's were a big improvement, better resolution, more room for bonus features, but true, one scratch (or damage to the eye in the player) and they were toast.
Laptops, iPads, etc. can give faster and wider access, but they can still crash.
How would you like to have been around in the 70's, when VHS existed, but the only people that could afford them were the ultra-rich? When players cost a thousand bucks, tapes only had thirty minutes of memory, and buying a blank tape would set you back sixty bucks?
(Back when minimum wage was $3.00 an hour, that's half a week's pay).
You can hate VHS all you want, and even be thankful you can AFFORD to hate VHS all you want. Ain't that great? 8)