I assume, though, that if the CBOE auction is a real auction, the product of the auction would be a single price at which all orders are crossed and not a bid-ask spread of 1.00 x 1.30. If my order were simply to be matched against the spread of a market maker on CBOE, I agree that it would be better to wait for the entire options market to open.
Much wider than 1x1.3 -- more like 1x10.
You can observe bid-ask spreads of 33%-50% or more, in S&P options,
in the middle of the day. (And that's regardless of SPX, ES, SPY, etc.) This is for the vehicle that sets the standard for liquidity. In lesser traded underlying, in the middle of the day, you can find 10¢-50¢ spreads on strikes within 2σ of the market. That's 5x, to be clear.

In the middle of the day.
Is it possible to buy-at-open a single option for 11¢ and immediately sell at 89¢? Yes -- but how many?? Your first would likely be a statistically-driven accident. Your second would not sell, and so you'll drop it down to 85¢, and in a minute, you'll be down to 29¢ hoping like hell someone catches you before you cross your buy-price. (See Bob's post above.) At that point, everyone else will disappear for a minute, having watched your well-lit demonstration of intent.
Thin thin thin = trouble trouble trouble.
(An interesting experiment, though. It'd be fun to do (with someone else's money) on a bunch of instruments, and see the differences.....)