Perhaps in part there's too much emphasis on "success" and "failure", as if it's one or the other, and only perfection achieves success. But this isn't true. You don't need a perfect modern-day birds' egg to incubate a chick. While the modern-day form of the birds' egg is still relatively better for incubation than, say, an egg with a thinner shell, or a smaller yolk, or a less permeable membrane for gas exchange, or not quite so well camouflaged a spot pattern, eggs without these "perfect" features will still be enough. Over the long term, after the passing of many, many generations, evolutionary pressures would tend to favour the "better" egg over the not-so-good substitutes, but it's a mistake to regard that "better" egg as absolutely necessary. As a result, returning to my first post -- the birds' egg is not irreducibly complex, so the rest of the argument simply falls flat.
Anyway, each bird species has a different style of egg, in colour, size, incubation period, etc etc. Even within species there exist variations, and in general any two eggs aren't perfectly identical.