It might be me, but I couldn't find details of Lumen, Lux or PAR at full intensity for this light on Amazon.
Superfish light details (these figures may be a bit out of date) model 93 (for a 3 foot tank), 35 Watts, 4680 Lumens, PAR is quoted as 269, but I don't know at what depth. Suspect it isn't the 40 or so cms that is often the top of the substrate from the light bar that many have. I personally found the Superfish light a bit harsh.
I have found Hygger and Nicrew disappointing. The former, for a 3 foot tank is only 2365 Lumens. I use the Nicrew for indoor terrestrial ferns in the winter, but I was, in all fairness able to grow crypts and Java fern in a tank with it.
I found the All Pondsolutions lights cheap, simple and effective but I don't have the manufacturer cited Lumens or PAR. But the lights for a tank up to two foot come it at 24 watts, the next size up for three foot tank is oddly only 26 watts. So hardly ideal for your purposes.
One advantage of the very cheap floodlights, on Amazon, they normally cite the CRI and Lumens. Though obviously not suitable in terms of fittings and aesthetics for all situations but the cheap lights I have, they produce excellent pearling even at 60 cms light source to substrate surface.
I've tested lots on my phone for intensity etc., but wouldn't trust the accuracy to cite publicly, but suffice it to say, I have found cheap floodlights have a better punch and often a better PAR than mid range specialist aquarium lights, I can't say anything from personal experience about the really upmarket versions. I do have a very good LED bar from Dennerle, now I think discontinued, but it wasn't cheap and is honestly, despite excellent build quality, no better than cheap floodlights for punch and pearling. I am no lighting expert just a chap who doesn't like to pay through the nose for things that don't offer much of a benefit over cheap readily available goods.
Well " any" equipment built and sold for a specialty industry will be " premium" priced.
Household spots or floods are usually cheaper for " lumens/watt or just have superior number if watts.
Problem of course boils down to convience and even look.
Most " commercial" lighting is rarely above 80 cri or even in the preferred 5000-6500 k range.
You want superior color @ cri's above 90 and they are as expensive or moreso than a RGBW aquarium led that can fake color accuracy and or color intensity.
Now currently there are " smart" bulbs but their wattage decreases compared to a simple 100w 5000k 80cri $30 yard flood light that one has to deal with the mounting aspects
Measuring cri below like 4500k is not relevant due to using a different standard than " daylight" as a baseline.
Now granted plants really don't care about cri or k temp, just #'s of photons they get.
One minor warning...if you measure the lumens/lux of an aquarium light with many red and ir blue LEDs the measurement is under reporting true intensity.
1000 lux of 650 red is 77 ppfd.
1000 lux of cheap white LEDs is 13.4 ppfd
Point is a RGB light will score lower than a 6500k white only light but be more intense for plants. Thanks to the Lumen / lux truncated light set.
Eyeball curve lux. A royal blue led shot full of yellow/ green phosphors will score high in lux/ lumens
A red/ blue led light of equal photon output will score low...to you..and be visually quite dim.
CREEs made their livlihood on this. Horrible color (70-80 cri, opinion) but massive lumen/ watt numbers.

Now that's not all bad since as seen above
plants use all the spectrum.
It's you that makes the difference.
You can always save some money going China direct of course. AliExpress has an anniversary sale. I was checking out their $110US par meters for aquariums.
Thought i'd throw my fav on paper but off the radar light brand. Along w/ Week aqua..

90w of RGBW LEDs. Cheap? No not really but my first yardstick is $/watt
Anything under $3US/real watt ( Chinese can play games here) is fair game so to speak.
I prefer watts over lumens. Will accept lux a bit more since there are rough calculators out there. Every spectrum is different
Online calculator to convert illuminance (lux) to PPFD (micromoles per second per meter squared).
www.waveformlighting.com