There is no perfect boat, just the one that is best suited to what you want to do. I started out solo fishing as a young teen fishing off the Oak Bay flats/Discovery/Trial with my buddies in my dads 21 foot sailboat. It took us forever to get out there battling currents and whatnot but we had a blast and caught fish, and only had to be rescued once... those old Ferryman diesel one-bangers tended to shake things apart! Since then I have run an east coast lobster style boat, 14 foot aluminum Lifetimer tiller steering, welded aluminum and fiberglass center consoles, 25' power cat and now a 24 foot aluminum sport fisher.
To be honest, I still think an 18-20 foot west coast CC with a T-Top is my favorite type of boat, especially for calmer/inside waters. Easy to tow with a Taco, seaworthy, easy to maneuver, gives some weather protection (especially if you get side curtains) and the walk-around is so nice for fishing. I also like my new boat with the head and galley and berth, but it is expensive all around (capitol costs, maintenance, insurance etc), has more systems to maintain and isn't as 'fun' as a smaller center consoles. Fuel burn is also 2X what a CC would cost in the 18 foot range. BUT before I built, my wife said it has to have a cabin with heat and a head, so following the "happy wife, happy life" doctrine I built accordingly.
The TomMac Everglide 18' CC welded aluminum has been my favorite boat so far and I took that thing 20 miles offshore to the banks without blinking an eye. Cheap to run, super dry with huge chines, stable with the hollow hull and bombproof construction. The closest to that boat is now the Bridgeview Marine CC series that took over that division of TomMac Shipyards. Nice boats but very pricey to buy new.
To my way of thinking, especially in a smaller boat, the hull design is everything. You wouldn't typically take a lake hull design and shift it over to the ocean directly. Yes, lots of people run lake boats on the ocean, but if you want a versatile boat that can get you through all sorts of conditions, pay attention to the hull design. Deep entry, big chines. Here you go, these are hard to find! A little elbow grease and it would look awesome.
https://bridgeviewmarine.com/product/everglide-aluminum-center-console/