Charging at home might make more sense regardless. My Model S still has free charging, and when I got it, I saw lots of people going to superchargers for everyday charging. "Free" charging seemed enticing, and prior to that, I had been spending about $3600/year on gasoline. But "free" charging wouldn't have saved me $3600, but about $600 that it would have cost to charge at home. When I added up the mileage to and from the closest Supercharger, figured out how many trips I'd need per year to charge, and compared that total mileage to the amount of depreciation for that many miles based on the rates I was seeing at the time, I would have lost about $1100 more on depreciation than I would have saved on electricity. Plus, if I compared the sheer amount of time to what it would cost to charge at home and get a job to earn the money to pay for it, it would have been a better use of time to get a job as a Walmart greeter, and use my pay toward the electric bill. I would have spent fewer hours that way. I think that most, if not all Lucid owners value their time more than that.
That's unfortunate and there really should be a way to report a non-functioning charger through the app. If there isn't one, I'll bother somebody at EA.
I'd consider myself an early EV adopter, and I'd consider anybody an early adopter who bought a Tesla and watched the status change from "reserved" to "sourcing parts" after finalizing the order. Now that millions of EVs are being made per year, I agree that we are early Lucid adopters, but we are not early EV adopters either in terms of volume, or in terms of years since modern EVs started hitting the market. I can't go anywhere without seeing EVs all over the place on the road.