Can you expand on what you mean? I've spent a bunch of time on MLs and while I like certain characteristics of them, tactility was never one of them. The only tactile feedback I feel is bottoming out...loudly. I find most scissor switch keyboards have a great amount more tactile "pop" in the stroke than an ML.
That might depend on your typing style and servo feedback.
According to Cherry, they are tactile:
I, for one, stopped making mistakes when switched to MLs. And the other necessary part for a good switch - I can "feel" without looking at the monitor when I've made a mistake (like too light a key press), so I can start correcting with BackSpace (and I even know how many characters to delete) during the time it takes to process the visual information.
That was never possible with rubber domes with or without scissors. Wrong force curve, wrong actuation position == no feedback.
One thing I am not sure is how MLs age - do they become more frictiony, sticky, linear or whatever. I used a brand new G84-4100 for about half a year. This is why I am interested in the lubing outcome.
Last, I am not ML fanboi - they are just OK switches which I can do with. I recommended them in this thread because of their short-stroke.