If you go back to my original post on the subject, this is exactly what I said the military does as part of the TOLD computation.
I apologize, I missed all that then. Now, this is going to sound snarky but I'm not being snarky. If that is what you are saying, you've answered your own question. If you move V1 up your runway gets longer and it isn't linear.
A 378000 pound DC8 would require about 8000 feet of runway on an ISA SL day at max thrust. Any increase of V1 lengthens that distant ASSUMING the brakes can do it.
What you are proposing would artificially lower you MGTOW unnecessarily since at a heavier weight and lower V1 you can stop in less runway.
From a nice to know perspective, not limiting, you would still find that any reject speed above V1 (calculated for for any given weight) would only give you minimal cushion, taking into account acceleration rates.
My current ride has awesome brakes, MGLW landing distances sub 4000 feet by a fare margin. A mere 20 knot increase in ref (no flap landing) increases that distance by 45%. This thing can almost do two MGTOW rejects without blowing the plugs.
My point being, you are thinking the FAA and mfgrs have just come me up with some arbitrary method and your experience with airframes not governed by the FAA or "capitalism" is somehow an apples to apples comparison.
Balanced field is the best compromise between ability and safety without crews having to employ any real special procedures to obtain maximum ability.
Bad happens, mash brakes, airplane stop.