There was one model of the Apo Nikkor 369/9 which had both an adjustable square aperture, plus a multi-bladed circular aperture, while also having a slot potentially accepting Waterhouse apertures. These are really really well corrected process lenses designed for precise apo round or square dot reproduction. But they also are better than any ordinary official enlarging lens of equivalent focal length, provided you can work with optimal apertures around f/11 to f/22 rather than the f/8 to f/11 of typical max aperture f/5.6 enlarging lenses. Some of my enlarger heads can be just too powerful, so smaller apertures are sometimes realistic. Even relatively wide at f/11, they're sharper than even my excellent Apo Rodagon N's at the same f-stop.
But the Apo Nikkors aren't available in any focal length shorter than 180.
Now if you take that same multi-bladed 360 Apo Nikkor (I have only adjustable round aperture ones), and put it on an 8x10 camera lensboard, does the multi-bladed aperture provide nice bokeh in that particular application. Nope. Although extremely sharp all the way from macro to inifinity, the out of focus rendering is busy and double-lined, much like some very sharp Nikon 35mm lenses with just 6-blade apertures. So the optical formulation is important too, and there was no logical reason to enhance bokeh in a process or enlarging application. I do have an old Zeiss single-coated tessar design 360/9 process lens which does OK for enlarging, but has wonderful bokeh when used for 8x10 shooting. So it all depends when shooting. But for enlarging, these old multi-bladed apertures seem to make no difference.