I built a load some years back, using 3 x FQA9N90C, which runs them -- I forget what the peak was, 100 or 200W max? Overall operating range up to 4A, 100-500V. (How is that possible? Tons of ballast resistors. It's a switched-resistor bank first, a power DAC if you will, and the linear sink fills in the gaps. Saves greatly on heatsink area.) In that time, I've cooked them up to design ratings, and, yeah everything works just fine. I have actually had two device failures, which I can potentially attribute to thermal cycling or poor mounting (one, the grease under it seemed to separate..?!), but have no reason to suspect the device SOA is false.
FQA9N90C are Fairchild QFET process (now obsolete), which I *think* is a conventional planar process; compare IRF740 (classic HEXFET), give or take subsequent optimizations. Of course it's not a "HEX"FET, but that's probably what they mean by "stripe", it's rows of transistors instead of a hex mesh of them -- whatever.
There isn't really an equivalent to them today; the nearest-rated cheap part current stocked at DK is Toshiba TK10J80E,S1E, which despite being the superior Superjunction process (they don't say so, or, you'd have to look up what "π-MOSVIII" means, but it's evident from the step change* in Coss and Crss), is only about a factor of 2 improvement in Qg*Rds(on). It doesn't have full SOA, but does have 2nd breakdown starting at a modest 200V, and usable power (40W or so?) up to 400V, so that's not awful.
There are SJ MOSFETs with full DC SOA out there; they're just lower power, or higher cost. Or the few surviving planar families -- IXYS is still making a few PolarHV types, which I think are planar. But IXYS is expensive, and you might as well use their linear-rated families if you're going to pay most of the price anyway.
*They actually show it as a step change! Most mfgs measure this parameter at a rapid Vds sweep rate where the step change is blurred out -- there's an RC time constant effect internal to the structure -- and yes that contributes switching losses -- with the result that you get a smoother curve but it's unrealistic, you'll never measure the same thing in the circuit. They also show the rising edge, which overestimates capacitance oddly enough, but critically it's not the same measurement rising vs. falling, which is to say there's a hysteresis loop in the capacitance measurement -- which is to say further: a loss element. But here, Toshiba measured it slowly enough that the step change is evident. It really does "switch" capacitance; it's actually even scarier than that (capacitance is undefined, or a multivalued function of Vds (including very large positive and negative values) in the transition region), but, nevermind that.
And yes I'm proud of that "discovery" and want to make it known as widely as possible. It took me ages to finally find all the information to put that together, including my own measurements. The manufacturers sure as hell don't tell you about it!
Tim