A couple of them are completely huge and allow for much freer movement of the models, some with there own scale propulsion which is important for this. Traditional WW2 style tank test was typically just a straight line tow, and that's a problem if were talking about a twin hull vessel propelled by massive water jets on the stern and sucking from the bottom. High speed ships generally dig in the stern under power, but that doesn't happen the same way if your towing a model. Model towing however is much cheaper, and produces reasonable results quickly.
Japan brute forced the hell out of the Yamato hull form and bulbus bow via a huge number of tow tests, and the results worked out better then even expected, but for most world war era stuff you weren't doing many runs.
The limitations of tank testing are why completely novel hullforms are usually tested at some kind of reduced scale on lakes or the actual ocean though. For DDG-1000 for example several progressively larger models were lake tested up to one quarter scale with an actual crew on the model controlling it it was so big.
Lakes might sound stupid for testing a seagoing ship, but they have the advantage that you can actually try to control the wave conditions on a repeatable basis. Usually they use the wakes of other larger vessels to make the required wave. The wave making vessel being the exact same size and speed each time means same wake, within the error produced of the actual lake waves which is small.

DDG-1000 R&D model demonstrating that it at least wont sink in a calm turn!