Think about this: 60 to 80 kg of petrol \ diesel can easily, in some economic engine + good driving style, give one up towards 1000 to 1250 km, while 400 to 750 kg of batteries may only last around 400 km, much less for some models, and big loss in cold weather.
My trusty old van (Opel\Renault\Nissan etc Vivaro\Trafic etc) does 1350 km no problem with 90 L of diesel, any temperature. And got a 5 L can in case of crisis (never needed it). A mate's Tesla 85d does 350 km then panic & sweat takes over. And a big loss of km's in low temps or high speed. Next, helplessly stuck in a snowstorm waiting hours for towing lol. btw that Tesla 85 is fitted with close to 8000 (yes, eight thousand !) 18650 cells
An electric has to use much of it's energy constantly moving up to 600 kg of battery around (+ burns watts to cool the batts in summer, heat them in winter), a petrol car only has to transport like 30 to 40 kg average of fuel. Wondering how much range this "battery transport" activity eats up. Like constantly driving a petrol car with 5 people + filled up with heavy luggage? (...still the petrol car would maintain a decent range).
Price of battery swap aside, 1 thing is very, very wrong with the current generation of electric cars: storage of energy > disastrous battery weight (& volume) vs resulting driving range.
So, want to be rich very, very fast? "Simply" get the patent for a battery generation with 1\5th weight \ 5x energy \ 1\5th charge time \ 5x lifespan vs lithiums
. Also, maybe we'll live to see hydrogen evolving towards real usefulness. Maybe a new hybrid: normal battery based propulsion (for daily routine) and an onboard hydrogen fueled charger (capable of doubling or tripling range when needed).
Personally, may get a cheap & minimalistic 'shopping cart' electric for town use \ shopping \ visiting folks nearby. As a main vehicle, electric is 111% out of the question until they fix that ridiculous battery weight \ range ratio.