Hussar
Legend
Sure, but you can see how "this power just works" without any lines of interaction or engagement can have issues. And it's not like we're done with such abilities- a Wolf Totem Barbarian in 5e grants advantage to his allies when they attack something adjacent to him. How? Why? Weird Angry Totem Magic, I guess.
If Come and Get It or Rain of Steel were written as spells in another edition, a lot of people would go "huh, cool" and accept that they work. Magic doesn't always need to offer saves, checks, or attack rolls to do it's thing. But historically, non-magic does, and the issue with the Martial Power Source is that people assumed it was "non-magic, just badassery manifest". So these powers are jarring if the Martial Power source is magic, and if it is, then that means the Fighter is now a magician, which, pick any thread, lol, you'll find a lot of people who don't want a "magic Fighter".
I'm not saying they should have designed these powers differently. A big problem for 4e was that many people expected it to be the same old D&D and were confused by the fact it was now more like Earthdawn or Exalted.
The truly funny thing about this was that out of the several HUNDRED martial powers in the 4e phb, there were four powers like Come and Get It which gave martial some sort of compelled action.
Four.
Totally optional powers.
That no one actually had to take.
That was the entire issue.
But here we are years later and people are still trotting out the same edition war crap from 2008. And then there’s a the claim that WotC wasn’t forced by the fandom to do anything.
