> I would think the common two prong plug for a wall outlet would be best.
Yeah, until you have a tangle on stage, pull an end out and plug it in the wall, and your speaker gets 1,800 Watts.
We also used US wall-plugs for photographic flash. Find an extension cord anywhere. Get your cords mixed up, explosion or shock.
Speaker current through or wiring-to a British National (Navy??) Connector is absurd. These are terrible connectors for anything except their designed use (and maybe not even then). True, you can't pull the connector off, but with anything short of 1950s coax and braid-clamps you can pull the wire out of the plug. They come in two pin sizes which do NOT interchange.
XLRs will carry speaker loads toward 100 Watts but are not friendly toward non-round cable and would be confused for microphone connectors with bad results.
The PL plugs are robust but a real pain.
The SpeakOn is designed for the purpose. Ample for any guitar amp. Can't be confused with any other power or signal connector. Bulky, expensive, and very non-traditional.
The 1/4" is 'wrong' but everybody knows what it is. If you get good jacks (with firm contacts) it is maybe a better speaker-level connector than a line connector (where tarnish isn't blown-away by high current).
The old Cinch and Jones plugs could have been excellent. Fairly low cost (but too many production options which limited what you could really find in stock). Ample current, way more voltage than speakers need, good reliability, compact. One fault is that when part-in, you can drop a wire scrap across the pins.