It is debatable how much long term difference the yeast makes, and whether one tastes better than the other. But let's assume it does make a minor difference. It would take YEARS of wine making and record keeping and experiments and blind tastings to figure it out. The best any of us can do is to report our experience good or bad.
Pasture Red(Premier Rouge)- worked well for me in 2017. The wine has finally come into it's own(was super fruity early), and while simple it tastes clean with good fruit now. It's easy to find in any brew store and perfectly good. Comes in a classic red package.
D254-Used once, no problems, I've been drinking up the Primitivo product over the last several months. Can't say better or worse than anything else, but favorable experience. One of my wine making friends likes this so I'll likely use again since we share yeasts and other ingredients.
D21- I used this in 2018 based on the pairing write up on MoreWine. Had great luck with it. Thought the wine was good and clean tasting right after fermentation and looking forward to the aged product. Is alleged to be tolerant of low nutrient musts. I didn't test that. Very favorable fermentations, will use again.
Avante- This stuff is the bomb. Used 2018 in PS and 2019 in everything. Clean fermenting, not fussy, genetically incapable of making H2S. It's also heat and alcohol tolerant, a true work horse and nearly ideal for garage style feremntation. Preliminary tasting says the wine is perfectly good. Will definitely continue to use.
And next year I want to try another Renaissance Yeast - Muse or (more likely) Bravo.
Just remember that many of the very best wines in the world are fermented with the yeast that comes in on the skins, and the actual strain of yeast may not be hugely important, especially in an aged wine.