The reason I liked
@Arnold 's idea is this:
The standard, typical, most basic way of doing unusual attitudes is to just be in level flight on some heading, they close their eyes, you maneuver some, say "recover", and they just go back to straight and level flight. In other words, there is often no real navigation component to it - they just have to recover from the unusual attitude.
But if it were to happen in real life, say on an approach, or in a hold, or whatever, if they just recover to straight and level and whatever heading they happen to end up on, heck that heading could be flying into a mountain that the approach is designed to avoid.
So I like the added component of having to continue navigating even though you're all disoriented - just like it would be for real.