Ilfobrom Galerie has a tiny bit of dry-down shift. It's an exaggeration to say "none". All other Ilford papers have shift more during drying. Regardless, I always review my prints not only after they are fully toned and fully dry, but ideally a week later, when my eyes are well rested.
Since I own several enlargers, I might leave the neg in one of them for the next printing session, just in case I want to fine-tune an image even
more after evaluating prints from the previous session. With rare exceptions, I've never purchased anything other than Grade 3 paper in any brand.
Most of my work is on sheet film and predictably exposed and developed. With small film cameras, however, there is often an oddball exposure on
any given role that benefits from the greater flexibility of VC paper. But each specific type of paper seems to have its own personality anyway, in
terms of what images best work with it, or how it specifically tones, and so forth. But I'll always be glad I learned on classic graded papers first.