I wouldn't restrict ourselves to broadcast FM either.
I've owned several radios by Alinco, Kenwood and Yaesu that featured general-coverage MW/SW receivers and used to listen to both MW and SW stations on them.
My old Kenwood TH-F7E + whip antenna was quite good for picking up shortwave… and both the Alinco DJ-G7T¹ and Yaesu FT5-DR I have now both have quite decent ferrite bar antennas for MW reception.
All of these have quite reasonable wideband FM reception too. The old VX8-DR I had would even do it in stereo, as does the FTM-350AR I have.
Well, right, that's kind of my point. The "good" radios store all those channels together and we represent it as such. The D74 driver literally declares its valid bands as 100kHz-470MHz and the modes include CW, L/USB, FM, NFM etc. Any channel can be used. Even the 20-year-old Icom V/UHF radios have WFM as a mode (range unrestricted) and if you want to program in broadcast FM channels, you do it wherever in the list you want. CHIRP supports all that for those radios no problem. Obviously radios like the Yaesu 817/857/897 have a very wide range of stuff you can program into any channel, being all-mode all-band models.
If a radio can only do WFM in the broadcast range in ten specialized memories, then expose those as specials, restrict them (and the regular ones) accordingly, but they might as well be represented on the sheet like the rest. That's MHO.
--Dan