Quiet.
Learning the system so you can easily transition to deeper later on (if that's your goal).
Of course CCR is quiet, bubble free and has a long duration especially for heavy breathers.
There are some esoteric uses where diving a CCR
shallow is important: military, fauna videography, long cave penetrations, etc.
Outside of those minor use cases, CCR is of little real benefit on shallow dives. There is no magical missing CCR application that will bring the massed ranks of recreational divers to spaff thousand$$$$ on equipment and training.
CCR is very expensive — an order of magnitude more than OC for the box. Then there’s the commitment to fettle that box; cleaning, pedantic preparation, checking, etc. Hours must be committed to that. What about the training and many hours of practice with the many different failure modes…. We also know that a rebreather is definitely not for everyone, some have the completely wrong attitude to dive them.
The running costs are high too. High pressure oxygen, scrubber, consumables (cells), analysis equipment, multiple cylinders… Compare that with a single air tank for an ultra-shallow dive: SAC of 20, depth of 5m/18ft/1.5ATA = 30 litres/min. Even an ali80 has 2200 litres, so that's well over an hour, more with a lower SAC. If you want longer bottom time, take two ali80s.
Of course if the diver's experienced diving a rebreather; if they happen to have a rebreather with them; if they've all the kit and caboodle; then dive a rebreather. If not, just dive OC for that really simple experience.