I am following Clara Löh's Geometric Group Theory. An Introduction, and in remark 5.1.12, she defines the category QMet whose objects are metric spaces and whose morphisms are quasi-isometric imbeddings, identifying two morphisms if they are close.
Before reading this definition, I thought that morphisms would be defined as any maps $f:X\to Y$ such that for some constants $A,B$, we have $d(f(x),f(x'))\leq Ad(x,x')+B\;\forall x,x'\in X$, and then we identify morphisms if they are close (so for example, constant maps would be morphisms). This just seemed to be the natural generalization of the category of metric spaces. With this definition, the isomorphisms are still quasi-isometries. My question is, are there a lot of situations where the more restrictive definition is more useful?