Then why choose it? The F2 has no LCD and without batteries still has all shutter speeds available.
The meter is in the body so all finders are metered, being on the vertically challenged side I used the waist level finder when holding the camera over my head upside down to get a shot, with aperture priority I could the lens wide open and let the camera set the shutter speed when I could not see the readout in the finder. The shutter was very accurate, the camera was lighter, carry 2 bodies, one with a motor drive 2 or 3 additional lens, a flash, a dozen rolls of film for up to 12 hours, any reduction in weight is welcome. The F3 P was weathered sealed, had a hot shoe, upgraded gears and other mechanics. Some called it the militarized version, I don't know if the American military used the P model, someone me told be years ago that Japaneses Army used the P, never confirmed.
In the field there were occasions that I to dig mud out from around indexing lever on a F or F2.
It is not that that the F2 was not a great camera, it was, when I shot with the F2 I was very happy with it. Yet there was a reason that Nikon came out with the F3, followed by the F4 and F5. I had considered the Pentax LX, higher flash syn, shutter would fire at high speeds without a battery, the motor drive was quieter. I decided on the F3, due to Nikon's great service system, I could rent lens that I did not use on a routine bases, and the wires used Nikon, so I needed a Nikon to memo out lens for an assignment.