I love active crossovers. All things being equal an active crossover beats a passive one every day. But, except possibly for sub woofers, generic crossovers have a significant weakness. Drivers, even good ones, are not flat. Much of this is handled by a crossover equalizing a driver as well as being a crossover. So crossovers must be designed to take care of these anomalies, meaning good crossovers are unique for their speaker taking into account the drivers and enclosures. Electronic crossovers usually assume perfect drivers. Digital crossovers can work but you have to design the way they process for each driver and high pass and low pass individually. So you need to know how a driver in its enclosure looks before designing the crossover, not so simple.
Just some things to consider.