You asked, but you didn't ask me. I've never been there, but here's what I've heard.
Upper levels and further back are better than up close. The venue isn't about leaning up against the stage. You want to take in the full visual.
You also want to avoid anything in the 100s level behind about row 20. You'd be under the overhang from upper levels, and you wouldn't be able to see the visuals anywhere above.
The venue claims that they have "audio beam" technology that targets each seat with a separate audio stream. It's all marketing bullshit, of course, but the sound is supposed to be spectacular regardless of your seat.