Also, with much lower impedances, so they can be driven to a reasonable level with the available voltage swing from a battery without needing a boost converter.
Old school headphones were usually somewhere in the 64 - 600 Ohm region, some even higher, modern ones tend to be much lower impedance and so need far less voltage to produce a reasonable amount of acoustic power.
The 1970s stuff used power rails of anything from 12 - 30V, so swinging 2V or so peak for a line level input was no big thing, modern stuff is running less then 4V rails a lot of the time, so 2V peak (4V pk-pk) is not easy.
50mW into 32 ohms is 1.3V RMS = 1.8V peak which is pretty much the limit for a ~4V nominal rail, and 50mW is plenty into most cans.
50mW into 600 ohms is 7.75V peak which means you are looking for a 15V rail at a minimum.
Regards, Dan.