I have been digitally printing for ~15-18 years. I am now printing B&W using Piezography. I have seen museum prints from Avedon, Adams, Fan Ho, and have small number of prints from Ross, Sexton, Ryuji, including small platinum prints etc. etc.
I can say that from a technical printing perspective, piezography is as good, or better than any darkroom prints.
I have no doubts about image quality of modern digital printing. Also the power of digital editing and manipulation opens up possibilities to produce amazing prints. Also if your originals are shot on digital cameras, the smart decision is to print directly on paper.
However I think we need to remember all digital prints are based on digital representation of the original; scanner makes its own interpretations of the negative - adds digital grain etc. So technically we are talking about quite a different products wet print vs digital process because there are so many modifiers to the original negative. Because of this I think it is unfair to compare digital representation to wet print directly.
On the other hand if you just need a top notch print on display, then drum-scan the negative, manipulate it on computer as good as you can and print on the best digital printer available. That will probably outrun wet print for sure in terms of outlook.
If you want a unique hand made product that has no computers involved and which will last "forever" then darkroom wet print is your weapon. If you want to be as close as to the original negative as you can, there is no other option. I think these kind of objects are still valued higher than any digital prints.