You may see some differences this year, Seedcorn.
I used to cage but the number of cages kept going up and these were larger, homemade affairs. They were bothersome to have around during the off-season.
Then, I caged with 3 posts and baling twine. That worked okay but staking seemed like less work. I'm not sure if it is, however.
When the tomato population went above about 50, I just let 'em sprawl! The last year I did that the slug damage was so bad it drove me crazy! So, I went back to staking.
Last year, the tomatoes had a fair amount of sunburn and splitting . . . The differences of weather and all but fruit is more exposed when you pull the plant up and continue tying it as it grows. I did a little modified French weave around my staked tomatoes just trying to not use such long posts and drive them into this rocky ground so far. It didn't work very well - altho' nothing fell over. The problem was that the plants were in a double row. Man, I had string going in all directions! It was all a little too much work. I suppose there are drawbacks to everything.
Steve