I have always liked the looks of hardtails, but let me share with you an experience that changed my view of them.
I have mentioned sometimes that I have a modern Suzuki GZ250. It is a small commuter bike, cruiser style -you can google if you want to see how it looks like. It is no hardtail, it has double shock in the rear wheel, and it has always been rated as "soft".
There is a section of road that I don't take usually, where the asphalt, for some reason, has "ridged". It is like if it has dilated and in some sections it has created "mountains", as wide as the road, and I would say the bigger one is at least 2 inches tall. I have gone through them with the car and you don't notice almost anything, just like those tiny speed traps that sometimes you go across, that are there just to warn drivers to slow down.
One day I was going fast on that road with the CB750, and my rear wheel -and butt- literally jumped off the road!!! I heared the engine revving up -being the wheel in the air there was no load- just to return to the same speed once the wheel came in contact with the road again. I thought my 40-year-old shocks needed replacement, and it was a scary moment.
Another day I was riding the same road with the GZ250 cruiser. I was oblivion of the road surface, and the ridges weren't that easy to notice. Well, when the rear wheel came over the ridge, even when the bike has swingarm, I felt an undescriptible pain across my spine. The seating position in the GZ250 is with the feet forward, all your weight rests on the saddle. You are probably seated while reading this. Imagine some force lifts your body two or three feet above the chair, and then your body is loose and you fall on the chair. Sure thing, your butt wont' suffer because the chair plush, but imagine what your spine will suffer. I had to stop right after there to regain shape and it hurted for many days. I was seriously concerned I had suffered a vertebrae-disc squeezed.
I don't want to imagine what could have happened, had I ridden a hardtail that day. We all like to look like badboys, but I think you look cooler on a softail than in a wheelchair.