I think you are probably trying to solve the problem with the wrong variable, the film.
Yes, switching films will get you a different result but there's no telling if you'll like the result better and switching films for this type of issue is actually a classic symptom of magic bullet chasing. Magic bullets (magic film/developer combos) do not exist. Both FP4+ and Tri X are excellent, but both will also take work and adjustments to your process to get the exact result you prefer.
The punchiness of the print is adjustable, looking at the results you posted I'd say the issue is probably in your printing process, not the film choice or processing.
If you want punchier you can simply adjust to a harder paper grade rather than changing the film development. If you find yourself always adjusting to a harder grade you can experiment with upping the film development time to say 11 or 12 or whatever. The instructions provided suggest that the times listed are just a starting point, it is normal to have to adjust them.
There are many reasons why a contrast adjustment may be needed. One example is the camera lenses we choose, my old large format camera lenses seem to make negatives that need a little harder paper than my Mamiya or Nikons, my Holga even harder. Another example is the lighting of the scene, another is the subject matter itself, and yet another is your mood.
If the result you're judging is created digitally then there is a whole extra layer of complexity that may be hiding what the negative is really showing you and neither switching films nor adjusting development may change things the way you hope, nor even be necessary to get what you want.