It's not that A2 takes a sharper edge, but for some people who don't complete sharpening, it may seem like it (it probably drops its edge easier).
What O1 does is wear more uniformly. In hocks two plane irons, the A2 should last about 25% longer than O1. That's the relative difference between my O1 irons and a LN A2 iron (I tested one of my irons later against a hock and it lasted about 5% longer, which is probably equivalent to zero in margin of error).
Someone with a grinder and modern stones probably won't care much about the difference between O1 and A2, but someone who is new and who can sharpen both equally might like the longer interval from A2.
This is what O1 looks like when it's out of clearance (functionally dull).
And A2
The grain of O1 is finer and it abrades a lot faster, which should mean that someone with experience would have a shorter sharpening interval with it. You can see at the very tip of the edge, the grain size coming off of A2 is visible, but for O1, the line just looks wavy.
The fine edge holding of O1 is a bit better (you'll have fewer small random chips), but anything that does significant damage to either will do the same to both.
The A2 iron edge pictured above is LN - which is cryo, like hock. If A2 doesn't get cryo treatment, apparently, the carbide distribution is more coarse (brent beach showed an LV and LN A2 iron edge a long time ago and you could see that the LV iron was more coarse at the edge as it wore - D2 is worse yet - and has a more coarse grain than A2 - more or less a similar steel with more chromium in it, so that's expected).
From a practical standpoint (the above is from a relatively controlled test - measuring length planed and weight planed to make sure both are in proportion), a decade or more ago, I had both Hock O1 and A2 irons and used a guide to sharpen, and used the same plane to plane a bunch of panels. The slightly longer working interval of A2 is noticeable if you do something like that (e.g., you'll notice that you get one and some more of the next panel done with A2 if you only get one panel planed to thickness with O1).
I've grown to like O1 better, but I sharpen a plane iron in about a minute.
V11 edge life is about double O1, and looks like this (the process to make it results in finer carbides than A2 - very uniform, gobs of chromium and wear resistance because of it)
But it's a bit of a trick to use a V11 iron in real day to day work and not damage the edge before it would've dulled from wear. If it's close in cost to A2, it's pretty much a better iron, though, and it's stainless.