But is there anyone else who still likes this piece, besides me?
Yes. But it's the butchering thereof - and I include myself in that

OTOH, if I'm browsing one of these classical mp3 sites and someone is playing it, I listen, so I must like it.
It's quite rewarding to play something that sounds so good, even if it doesn't sound as good as it should, you've got a week to move your left hand, and it's great for seeing that lots of sharp signs in a score aren't a "oh no" because of the repeating patterns.
Far worse than people like me playing it are those that transcribe it to A minor and call it "easy" because it defeats a, imo, worthwhile purpose of playing it before you should.
Similarly with Fur Elise, the right hand / left hand stuff largely alternates, so you can play it before you can play hands together.
Both most folk know it too or probably have recordings of it - which is typically not the case in the obscure "how can we sell CDs of pieces 25 bars long for the same price as concertos" ABRSM books.
There's the name thing too - especially stuff like "should sound like moonlight bouncing off a river" stuff. It's like if he did say "read the Tempest", which is debated, he probably didn't say "read the title of the Tempest or just look up "tempest" in a dictionary" - if it'd been Hamlet it'd be "Try to make it sound like a small village"
