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While this is true as a general tendency, I think it is misleading to think that everyone should go in the same direction. Speed is especially prevalent in young players, but it is far from being the only way of winning.You are one of the lucky people here. And maybe your rubber replacement process is very careful, and you also use good glue. But not everyone is like that.
I agree that the Q and W series are excellent for a forehand topspin-oriented game, with a high arc and heavy spin, but they are not suitable for close-to-the-table players with a fast backhand-oriented style like mine. The main reason is that they are head-heavy, which slows down wrist usage and wrist acceleration.
In addition, blocking with this series does not provide particularly effective results either. Maybe you feel your backhand has improved because your previous backhand lacked spin, and that is exactly the outstanding advantage this series brings.
However, the key point of the modern backhand game is speed and wrist usage, especially with techniques like flicks and demi. The rebound needs to be crisp and direct, while speed is prioritized.
Even at the very top of the game you can find speed/backhand oriented (Felix, Lin Yun Ju, Harimoto), power oriented (Hugo, Alexis), spin oriented (Liang Jingkun, Gauzy), unorthodox (Truls) and balanced ones that unite all of it (Wang Chuqin - who is by far the best at the moment and a forehand player).
I think everyone, amateurs to pro, should follow their natural strengths especially, with an eye of course to the evolution of the game.