Hm, I seem to remember a discussion about this.
Well I'd be more in favor of it, I guess, if there wasn't this total switch between foo/bar/baz and %foo/bar/baz in terms of the effects on interpretation of bar and baz. It feels misshapen to have the properties change so radically if you want to have a variable supply the base vs. a literal and have that change the whole dynamic and implementation.
This seems like perhaps, indeed, what is missing is construction syntax for FILE!
If %foo/bar/baz was just [%foo bar baz] by default in path form, and it obeyed the general Rebol rules, that would be fine. No slashes in FILE! by default, you need construction syntax to get them... or to put that PATH! in an evaluative context where it evaluates and you get a FILE!
%[foo/bar/baz] could--for instance, be construction syntax for a FILE! that actually had slashes in it. Or maybe %#[foo/bar/baz]. anyway, something like that.
You become a bit more prescriptive about the rules, maybe life gets harder for people who put numbers in their filenames and violate the idea of "nice words". You have to start using parens, e.g. %foo/baz/("11.html")
Paths that drop off to nothing end in NONE. So %foo/baz/ is actually [%foo baz #[none]] while %foo/baz is just [%foo baz] as a path.
This wouldn't affect dialects in which FILE! was used as a simple string without path characters... but if they wanted to support FILE! that might be a path, the data entered would either have to use construction syntax to get those characters or the dialect be updated to check for PATH! and look at the first element (or evaluate it)
#:[4chan rules] => :4chan rules (single get-word!), #:[4^]chan] => :4]chan (escapes used on bracket)
#[4chan rules]: => **4chan rules: (single set-word!), #[4[c]han]: => 4[c]chan: (paired bracket rule)
Putting the colon on the tail is tricky but may make it hard to tell from binary.
Anyway, point being, maybe instead of being hung up on how words limit things, getting it to be less painless if you need to break the mold is a better idea. Parens are available on paths.
But it suggests the routines that break apart filenames into component parts should be producing PATH!, not BLOCK!.