I run Windows with a 13900k and a 4070 TI which is a pretty fast combo. With that, PL is reasonably fast from a processing perspective, but it doesn't touch a candle to LR for organizational speed and convenience. The consequence is that I use LR for import and file management and both Topaz and PL for processing specific images. The file management features of LR are hard to beat. I currently have 71k images in the library and and can almost instantly sort in many ways, including by lens, or by camera type. That appeals to my inner geek.
This is an interesting discussion topic: "image management." And of course, in the immortal words of the Buddha (or was it Gandhi?) "To each his own," depending of the specific needs of a photographer, some programs might offer better solutions. That said then,
For myself, I swore off programs that create a library based on its internal structure to "manage my photos for me" a long time ago. After being burned severely twice - by programs being discontinued - and then countless times in-between by "glitches," "bugs", "upgrades" and various and sundry incompatibilities, all of which combined to lose the information that was painstakingly input and then waste my very valuable time "fixing" things just to get back to where I was before the program decided to #!$@! things up, I discovered
GraphicConverter, which was the software bundled with MacOS before "iPhoto" was even a twinkle in Steve Jobs' eye. I couldn't believe what this program did. I have used this amazing program ever since.
I can't really think what this program
can't do, as it does everything I've ever needed. And is it not a "library management" software; It is an
image management program, independent of any "library." In other words, it allows you to manage your individual images, not create a proprietary library, which then forever requires the software to be used to find anything. In this way, every photo I've ever taken (back to digitized slides and film from the 70s - and even digitized family photos from the early 20th Century) has been numbered, titled in detail, paired (with Raw & JPG versions), tagged (i.e.,.star or label), input with GPS (if from another source), etc., so that it is searchable by any program besides GC ("Graphic Converter), such as Spotlight or the Windows search tool. You can search and find images by virtually any field or fields, though I've never needed to search by camera or lens (I have no idea why that would be a need myself but...) In other words, every photo I've ever taken is my "database" regardless of where it resides, or even in what OS or computer it resides, or even
whose photos they are - you just need the search criteria. And folder can be set up and viewed in a SlideShow mode, which aids in reviewing image for culling, editing, etc.
As an example, a nearly 30 GB folder of some recent Christmas Day photos I took of the family (JPG/RAW pairs, plus some mp4, mov files) from three different cameras, were loaded very rapidly onto my computer (MacStudio M1 Ultra, 128GB RAM) via SD or CFExpress card, chronologically numbered by time (as is my protocol), dated, titled (JPG/RAW auto-paired and titled together) in about 9-10 minutes. Then, drilling down to
adding specific details to subsets of image titles (e.g.,. "Mary Opening Diamond Broach gift" or "Portrait - Harry and Sally on Couch", etc.) takes only as much time as you can find and group the subjects and type the additional information. In all, 30 GB of Christmas holiday photos/movies were done in about 30 minutes, give or take. And let's say I discovered that I wrote "Cristmas" instead of "Christmas" on 800 or so images

eek

. That can be corrected in a matter of seconds.
After that, "exporting" to Photoshop for refinement and Raw-to-JPG final conversion is as easy as drag-and-drop from a slide show style browser window which also allows for quick editing out of lousy shots. While GC does have basic PS-like editing capabilities and there are a couple of features that are easier, I mostly work in PS with plug-ins like NikEfex, Anthropics or Topaz as I might deem appropriate.
Am I suggesting this is the best way and that everyone should do it this way? No. I am merely outlining a way that I do it and done it for almost 30 years, which might be a useful idea for someone looking for an alternative way to the way they are currently doing it and not satisfied with that.