Ah, the perils of being in a different time zone to everyone else and not having the time to reply until the usefulness of said reply is long past. I wonder if we could use a 'general tornadoes discussion thread' for things that aren't directly about current events or don't fit our existing threads.
I thought several of those were nighttime tornadoes, though?
Most large events have at least some tornadoes at night, something I suspect is understated for older ones. May 3 1999 is 'the' plains outbreak for many people and had quite a lot at night.
The problem is: what is a classic, high(er) end plains outbreak? I think most people's expectations are set by 90, 91 and 99, of which the first two had most of their notable tornadoes in daylight. But there's been some night outbreaks, like 25/5/55. I've my pet idea that plains outbreaks tend not to have quite the same combination of geographical spread and intensity as those elsewhere, but that's based on... not much. I find the more you think about this the less clear the answer is. Especially when you look at older outbreaks and wonder whether the 'fewer days, larger outbreaks' paper has something to it. Or you start thinking about whether the diurnal predominant climatology is due to smaller events. It becomes hair tearing.
I look for something with more spread that, say, Greensburg 07 even if the numbers of sigtors are similar. That was a genuine 'storm of the day' event. 9/5/16 wouldn't quite meet my idea of a major event in terms with its small cluster of notable tornadoes in S OK and everything else off in NE, it fit the enhanced it was forecast as. 16/11/15 fits better as a contiguous outbreak (but no-one makes long-term plans for a storm chasing trip in November).
It'll be interesting to see the numbers that eventually shake out of this outbreak, IMO the somewhat circumspect forecast was reasonable, and it was towards but not at the ceiling. One thing's for sure though, the main event by intensity, if not by numbers, was at night.