Interesting debate
First of all, all car manufacturers are mandated by law to make their engines ingest their post combustion gases, both by EGR and PCV. Consumers and tuners alike messing with said emissions controls are actually breaking the law, but in the UK at least, it's very loosely regulated.
Secondly, you might think, ah well, if it's just an emissions thing, I can just delete it then. Winner winner chicken dinner, no more bunged up intake valves and more power, hurrah!
Well, not really.....
Even on a healthy turbo engine, blow-by pressure can be as much as 20-30psi, maybe more on a remapped engine. If that pressure is not evacuated by a PCV system, that's 2 bar+ of pressure that can force it's way back up the turbo oil drain hose and over whelm the bearings/seals.....hence the blue smoke.
How do you stop that from happening? Funny you should ask, a PCV system! By feeding the rear PCV into the turbo, it forcibly evacuates this pressure thereby allowing the turbo to dump it's oil back into the sump unrestricted, and also create a negative pressure behind the piston rings for better compression. And that's just the boost side of things. There's another side to the PCV that deals with the vacuum side of things, again, to help with cylinder sealing. Not to mention an oil separator attached to the oil filter housing, which is a 'catch can' of sorts.
So there you go, that's why the OEM PCV system is so complicated, and it's not just for emissions reasons. It's basic physics.
As for carbon fouling, you will never get rid of it on a DI engine, even with a full delete.....because exhaust reversion. It's a natural phenomenon all engines suffer from. Cam overlap allows a certain amount of exhaust carbon back through the intake that bakes onto the valves, plus oil dripping down from the valve stems is also baked on in the big chunks we've all seen in pictures. Carbon fouling is more to do with that than the PCV system.