An opinion,
No 5 could be a problem depending on the gain structure of the effects you are using. It might overload some FX units or fail to drive them hard enough.
No 5 It also does not have TRUE BYPASS which the DPDT switches provide in the other circuits, if you like the sound that those two triodes add to your sound then that is an advantage, the others could be modified to this IN/OUT scheme.
No 1 is the most flexible if you've got room for three pots, although No 4 should get the job done just as well with 2 pots, but MAY need a little tweak of the 220k resistor in red box. (unlikely)
No 2 and No 3 may need some tweaking of those resistors in red boxes to match your effects units and then they will work fine, until you get a new effect unit with different gain structure and then they MAY need tweaking again.
Depends on how many pots you can fit in your amp, and how much you enjoy adjusting them.
The 10M resistor and 0.22uF capacitor could be placed into any one of those systems, it is a negative feedback circuit to reduce gain, give flatter frequency response and reduce any reactive imbalances that may occur due to long cables from effect units to amp. You may or may not be able to notice the difference in tone. If you need to cut the return level gain down a bit this may be useful.
There are also some slight differences in the valve biasing which you could tweak to taste although it is doubtful I could hear the difference, others might think it is a major issue.
Have fun.