My experience with Dyna is not a good one. Decades ago I installed the green 3Ω Dyna coils with yellow Dynatek silicon wires. A lot of advertisement bla, bla of 36.000 Volts, but personally I've never experienced any improvement going from stock to Dyna. Now that I understand more of ignition systems, I know why. The only good thing one can say, is that you can renew the HT leads easily. Not that it helped me: one of the Dyna's was shot after only 30.000 kms. BTW the stock Toyo coils still live both after having served over 75.000 kms. The Dynatek silicon wires were and are fine though.
There is a lot of nonsense about widening gaps, higher voltages etc. Yes, the ignition needs a high enough voltage ofcourse to start the proces (stock coils are more than adequate for this!), but even important is enough burning time aka spark duration. When you gap wider than Honda recommends, you may create a higher initial voltage (that you don't need!) which will cause quicker erosion of the plug tips. Aiming for a higher voltage also will shorten the burning time. My preference would be a longer spark duration. With my homebuilt transistor ignition I have a spark duration of over 2000µs which equals a burning time of 36o rotation. Another feature of my transistor ignition (which I admit is a blunt Velleman K2543 copycat) is, it will not fry my coils when I leave the ignition key switched on.
Hondaman can explain better than I why you need resistors. I still have my doubts but maybe the Dyna coil was ruined by running it for quite some time without resistor. I don't remember, it's too long ago. Better stay on the safe side and use resistors as there will be less oscillating ofcourse and you'll need some impedance anyway to ride legally.