I made a mistake and had a bump in the wet due to a lapse of paying attention to the traffic (I was approaching on a wet, cobbled bridge. I was looking in my side view mirror to get moved into the left lane and looked forward to see cars backed up a little in front of me at a set of lights). It would have happened in a 1.0 Micra if I was in one of those, rather than being fault of the Supra in my instance (in my opinion, of course).
Apart from that one time, I'm happy enough driving in the rain. Obviously the conditions change the way in which things can happen, but an assessment in advance of attempting anything stupid prevents problems from arising. At the end of the day, I could put the foot to the floor in the dry from zero boost to get a huge kick in 2nd, I won't in the wet as I know it won't go smoothly like it does in the dry.
You don't put foot to the floor when approaching a 90 degree bend the same as you do on a huge clear straight. You assess the conditions before acting, exactly as you should in the wet. It isn't a hard concept to comprehend