Compared with something like a P-47 or P-51, a Spitfire, especially the early marks, landed very much 'power-off', throughout approach, unlike the P-47 or P-51, which throughout approach, you have very much 'power-on'. The Spitfire is a light airframe, with a lot wing, and the airspeed on approach and landing is sometimes 'surprisingly' slow compared to heavier American designs. As one pilot once described, pulling the power back to proper speeds throughout approach in the Spitfire, was quite concerning to him at first, since he was so accustom to landing the Mustang - in which if you brought the power back as far as you would in the Spitfire, the Mustang would simply fall out of the sky before you ever reached the airfield (same can be said for the P-47), where as the Spit just continued to fly like a 'normal aircraft' all the way down to a very slow, 65-68 kts, three point landing. In a Spitfire, you aren't showing proper landing technique, if you don't land it all three points at once (some, like me, would say that about most all tail-draggers, the P-47 and P-51 included) - and as a result, your view does become obstructed just as you pass over the threshold, requiring visual cues of the runway from your left and your right.
Another thing, which I am sure will be one of the 'main-points' when landing this upcoming product, is that with flaps down in a Spit, the air through the radiator(s) is blocked, which tends to heat up the coolant quite fast. Typically you wait with the flaps, for this reason, until you are on final, rather than base. Once you have touched down, you want to raise the flaps as soon as you have the aircraft under control - however only at low speed, as sometimes the flaps like to rise at different rates, and at speed, through your landing roll-out, this could lead to problems. On a go-around, it is normal to make at least one complete circuit, with gear and flaps up, before attempting the next landing, to allow the coolant to cool off, especially since a go-around is performed with flaps down until a positive climb rate as been achieved, and the gear is up.