Mostly everything I keep now a days is wild or maricultured. A few frags of stuff from reefers just to even out the color in the tank and get a few I don't see coming in from reefs much at all.
In my experience it isn't much of a risk buying wild corals. As long as you can look at the coral and understand if its stressed or healthy. I don't go to a store and buy corals if the skin is thin, bleaching, or extra bright and or pale. Knowing the signs of a stressed coral is key to success buying wilds. Also having a qt tank is a big one, I find it easier to keep new wilds in a qt area to watch them, if a spot starts to stn or rtn I either glue over it or cut the colony into frags. I will not buy a coral that is bleached or showing signs of bleaching.
A handful of maricultured corals die on each shipment, I either pick the healthy ones as soon as they come in (preferred before they hit a LFS system) or after they have been in the LFS system and already changed color or hue. Buying after the color shift gives me assurance that the coral will have a MUCH better time living and adjusting to my tank.
Naming wild corals is a good way to keep track of who has what and follow your coral in others tanks. Personally I do not name any of my corals until it has grown into a colony and been fragged a few times. Once a few people have it and it holds good color and growth in others tanks I will think about naming the coral. I only do this with the unique or more rare corals I have grown. I won't name a tricolor, red digi, purple tip nana or anything that is a common coral. I only name something to track who has what. It does make it easier for me to sell some frags of stuff that I am not sure of the species.
Naming a fresh wild coral that hasn't adapted to aquarium life because it looks cool when it first comes in I will leave up to certain stores and sellers. (Not taking any shots with that statement) A lot of corals have crazy colors when they first get here but a high percentage change color and will not stay like that. A lot of them will keep amazing colors though, especially if you understand what coral does best under what light and tank conditions.
I bought a brown maricultured over a month ago and today its purple with pink polyps

. That's why I love wild corals. If you know how to pick them and keep them its not much of a crapshoot, but it takes time and a few errors to learn how.