The effectiveness of a french drain is heavily dependent on soil type. Around here, we have a ton of clay, and it is not ideal for a french drain...water takes forever to absorb.
Whoever did the downspout drains around my house didn't understand a few things: soil conditions, proper drain sizing, and material selection. They made a lot of french drains, and all of them ended up failing for the same reasons within about 10 years or so, which led to water backing up and spilling over against my house/foundation. Every single one of them was done with 3" corrugated, which could not flow enough to handle the heavier rains. All of them ended up with root infiltration - since they were done with corrugated, you couldn't just clean them out, so all of them had to be dug up.
I was going to replace them all until I did some experimentation with one of the downspout drains. I attempted to do another french drain using 4" PVC, and quickly found that the soil just isn't conducive to it. Due to this, I just decided to divert the water away from the house (to daylight), and let it spread out at surface level into the ground. It isn't ideal, but with how my property lies, I don't have enough slope to drain it toward a storm drain without installing a pump of some sort.
Bottom line: don't put too much thought into it...just divert the water to where it isn't going to cause harm, and let nature take care of the rest. Bonus points if you can do it in a way that doesn't cause standing water. I'm not a fan of french drains, at least not around here.