I tend to prefer Win brass. It's a little harder than most, and wall thickness seems to be fairly consistent.
Flash hole debur, primer pocket uniforming, case neck turning (only slightly to clean it up) means that all cases are pretty good for at least the 1st firing. The question becomes one of how long it stays "good", i.e. with the natural tendancy for brass flowing to the neck over time.
Minimum case wall thickness variance across multiple points across it's circumference is an indicator of how long the "quality" will stay in quality brass. Cases with less variance will provide consistency longer without major rework other than length trimming/chamfering/primer pocket uniforming.
In closing, if you are willing to invest the time to tweak common brass into fancy brass, I'd put forth the concept that it may be better to have good common "tweaked" brass vs spending almost double on the fancy brass.