The DSLR's main advantage, in my view, is that the sensor is much bigger. So there are more pixels and greater resolution (important if you crop a lot of the photo out) - but also the pixels are larger and less likely to register as random noise (more important if you shoot in low light)
Operationally, if most of your photos are outside in decent light or shot with a flash, noise becomes less of a problem.
If you can zoom to make your subject fill the frame before even touching the shutter, cropping in Lightroom/Photoshop/On1 may not even be needed. With a good vibration reduction built into the camera and high power zoom built in, this is usually less of an issue than with a phone or even a typical DSLR mid-range (70-200) zoom.
Personally, I still have my old Canon SX50HS superzoom while I traded my Rebel T2's off a couple years ago. If I wasn't shooting photos for others in a dark environment and need to crop, I wouldn't have bought a Canon 5D4 and a couple of zoom lenses.
The Superzoom is small, light, has excellent magnification for displaying on the web and prints up to about 8x10. My only recommendation is to buy a lightweight monopod and carry it everywhere. It's almost impossible to hand hold shots at full zoom.