The firing pin has to have the same protrusion recessed or non as it the rear face of the case is the same distance from the recoil shield in either case, so the firing pin has to stick out the same amount to hit the primer or in this case crush the rim. The firing pin of course must be accurate enough strike rim but not the raised are of a recessed cylinder, but as this is much more of a vertical problem and not so much a problem from of slight rotation lock up allowances of a revolver, that is well taken care of just by the firing pin bushing only allowing the protrusion to occur in its center and any kind of decent cylinder pivot system (yoke tube) and rear cylinder latching point not allowing the rear of the cylinder any vertical movement. That plus the fact that most rim fires run a frame mounted firing pin makes this a complete no issue. The only rim fires I have seen with strikes outside the recess either have a really serious timing issue or cylinder stop failure.
As to a tight recess that would be an engineering failure as there is no need for them tho be anywhere near tight around the rim itself. The rim OD on a 22lr is .287 and if you make the OD of the recess .300 or even more, they would never be tight and contain a ruptured rim better than a ring around the outside of the cylinder.
Only reason of, other than cost cutting, I can think of is a belief that ammunition and rimfire priming has improved to the point failure is less of an occurrence and when it does occur the fault and therefore the liability is with the ammo manufacture not the gun.