Same here. But, I learned to play on a Les Paul and played one exclusively for the first decade of my guitar life, so the controls on them are telepathic to me - I never even think about them. When I play other guitars it takes me a bit to adjust to the controls, I'm always looking for the pickup selector where it is on an LP.
As far as "best of" I'm not really sure. I kind of like having different guitars for different purposes because they force me to play and think differently. Les Paul's are like an extension of my body at this point and I feel and play the best with one, but it can become a crutch in a way, so I like to force myself to pick up my Tele or PRS or one of the others and sometimes that creates a situation where I play a certain way or get a certain sound out of it that I likely wouldn't have created with the Les Paul. So, I don't think there is one amalgam of different design elements and parts that is my ideal. It'd certainly be based on the Les Paul if there were because nothing else is as comfortable for me, but I think I'd prefer to just keep using different ones for different reasons.
I learned to play on a one pickup, 1959 Silvertone with sky-high action and no selector switch.
After that, almost anything felt like an improvement.
Of all my guitars over the years, the 2005 Schecter C1 Hellraiser is the only one that played perfectly right off the hanger....I see lots of guitars that I like, or that I think are cool, but the Schecter has earned me more money than any other guitar with zero invested other than straings and straplocks.
No, I do not like the 25.5" scale or the silly 3 keys on each side, but I am willing to live with that....
Of course, I still have the old 1987 Squirecaster and probably always will, but it's beat up pretty bad after 29 years of gigging...
The Destroyer is a sentimental guitar, reminiscent of my past, but it is an absolutely incredible player. That was totally unexpected.











