Build the Q-Jet right, you can have both.
The only way a properly calibrated Q-Jet will hold back performance is if the engine needs more airflow than a Q-Jet can provide. Considering every Q-Jet is capable of at least 750cfm, you need a pretty stout engine to need more than that.
There are many cars competing in the F.A.S.T (Factory Appearance Stock Tire) classes, many are deep into the 10s. The entire point of this class is to bend any rule possible, while maintaining a stock appearance. That means no aftermarket headers, no aftermarket aluminum intake manifolds, no aftermarket wheels and tires (factory size, and factory tire construction) and factory carburetor. For the majority of GM cars, that means the Q-Jet. You are allowed more compression, camshaft, big stroker engines, any gear ratio, etc as long as the car looks stock it fair game.
I’ll say it again, when these cars and trucks were new, they were expected to start easily in any weather, in any environment, by anyone from 80 year old ladies on their way to bingo, to priests on their way to deliver the Sunday sermon, and start and perform without drama and without fiddling with them, or have the owner stinking of exhaust. Properly maintained, there is ZERO reason they won’t today.
The Q-Jet has by far the largest production run. Nothing else is close. The same basic design from the mid 60s all the way into the late 80s.
Btw, ford used Q-Jets on a few of its performance cars.