The 60HP Varg I test rode really needed to be at 50 HP or thereabouts to be able to reliably & instantly loft the front over things similar as an ICE bike with a clutch.
It was nicer to ride at around 40-45 HP, but just didn't have quite enough pop to stand the bike up at a moments notice at that level, for me at least.
It's likely that a rider with better timing & technique ( read ; talent ) than I could manage with just a 40-45 HP setting.
What's most interesting & encouraging with all the recent development of bikes like the Stark, Ultra Bee, soon-to-be Dust & others is that now that there's lots of these being used for differing disciplines, their limitations & any deficiencies for specific applications are becoming well documented & understood, which bodes well for the next generation of machines to follow.
Let me try and explain it this way. On the Varg the HP setting really sets the motor current limit; at RPM below about 7K this is actually more of a torque limit. Of course, HP is proportional to torque so it is called a "HP" instead of Newton meters. I apologize in advance for the math but here it is.
Battery_Voltage * Battery_Current = Motor_Voltage * Motor_Current
Also remember that Motor_Current corresponds to torque and Motor_Voltage corresponds to RPM.
This holds as long as we are not in field weakening, so below roughly 7K RPM, or about half the Varg's top speed.
So using throttle at low speed to lift the front doesn't require much power because Motor_Voltage is low (because Motor RPM is low). A half pack or 3/4ths pack would have no problem lofting the front end. Where you get into issues is with range and torque at high speed.
Also, heat is proportional to current squared times resistance. So 80HP makes 1.77 the battery heat of 60HP (if you are actually using that power).
In short, with a half or 3/4 pack I don't see a battery heat issue or torque limitation issue with enduro or single track. Range is the biggest issue.