This is, in my opinion, thinking about it backwards.
The way I am able to make good prints is that it all begins with the paper and the paper developer. Once you have figured out what they are capable of, then (and only then) do you start creating negatives that suit the paper. I have no scientific method to do this other than trial and error, but that is the methodology I employ.
This raises the quality of the final output by a mile, and the negative is a really integral part of that work flow. But it has to suit the paper. The developed negative is, in my book, much more a function of how we expose the film and how we develop it, rather than the in-built qualities of the film itself.
Some people cried when Tri-X 320 disappeared in roll film. I figured out a way of replicating the tone curve of TXP using TMax 100, and came up with two prints that are virtually indistinguishable. Imagine that. It took a two stop under-exposure, and push processing in Xtol 1:1 to get there, but I did it.
What's the moral of this little story? The film itself is, in my opinion, not that big of a deal. There are differences, make no mistake about that, and if you develop the film according to the massive development chart on Digitaltruth.com then the differences will show up a lot more than if you really learn how to use the film and develop it to a certain contrast that fits the paper, and by then the differences are much smaller.
The ultimate truth: It matters a whole hell of a lot more what YOU DO than WHAT materials you use.
There is no 'best' film. They are all best and they are all worst. It depends on our skill and what we do with it what comes out the other end. Don't cry over spilled milk. Hunker down and do something about it instead. Work that Plus-X hard, and work that FP4+ hard, push their limits, exceed their limits, find out what happens. Learn something. Then go make negatives that fit your paper.
You guys are comparing prints, not films. One must assume a printer has his vision and methods worked out, printing to the same paper and development techniques. By that time you have left the negative far behind.
Not to say the posted examples are not beautiful.
In the end we lovers of Plus-X are out of luck.
It's like losing your best girlfriend and dating her sister. It just won't be the same.