I've sort of been keeping this half under my hat.... But I ride a Brewer 9'6 Tufflite quite a bit.
It's super durable for the rocky reef conditions that I frequent. I'm actually ready for her 3rd centre fin. I never loved Fin Number 1, and got a few little rock dings in that fin, and Fin Number 2 is a True Ames 9.0 L-Flex B, with a few rock chips, and I've sanded her back to re-establish the edge.
www.trueames.com/products/l-flex-surf-fin (9-B in Smoke)
She has a heap of volume, and catches everything and anything.
Some people think that board has too much rocker, but the rocker is suited to both powerful waves, and slower waves. Well the volume helps in the slower waves.
Paddle speed in second to none. I can cover acres of ground in no time. Sneak inside for small ones, and sweep outside for wide king sets, and anything in between. In Al Merrick Terms, "The Wavehog". Still not sure if that relates to the board or the rider!?

But on that note, I actually apologised to a guy who dropped in on me. He was waiting in his spot all day, and on my long paddle back up the reef, I found a nice in-between one. He dropped in on me, and he apologised, but I said "No, it was your wave, you've been waiting, and I shouldn't have gone for it in the first place".
The Board has a little ding on the tail, and she seems a tiny bit Tail Heavy maybe. But if anything that would only help a Tuffy. Add weight up the back like a rear engined Ferrari or Porsche...
Anyway, I've had her for a few years, since new, and it's a board that would never be sold. Unless her younger twin sister came knocking on my door.

I still love surfing heaps of my other boards, but The Brewer 9'6 is probably ridden about 33% of the time.... Depending....