My friend Chris calls these "birthing rights."
For some products and MVP could be very crappy and you would still use it because it's novel and solves a problem in an unexpected way, or does something new where trying the product is worth the experience.
For the rest of the products you have expectations of what they look like and how they work, and if those features are missing, then indeed you will not even consider trying.
I think this has been the case for a very long time, but now that coding is becoming somewhat obsolete, simple MVPs are dying indeed. No one needs another X for Y. Your product has to be wildly different to still be accepted as an MVP.
I feel what you feel, but the only way to get over it is to go through it. I would recommend biting your lips for a few weeks and releasing as many apps as you can; you will learn a ton and start seeing the world differently. There's nothing I can say to convince you of that, unless you try it yourself.
Also, I'd recommend dropping at one of the AI Tinkerers meetups (tinkerer dot ai) , it really helped me to see the AI world through other people's eyes and to see what gets them excited. You don't have to say anything or present anything, but listening to others will help you be more excited, I promise.