Good luck CT!
Always remember when it comes to finesse fishing, slow & unsteady retrieves get strikes, which is why Beetle Spins don't work as well some of the time because of the steady retrieve needed to keep the blade spinning.
Every lure design shown has a different action using the same unsteady retrieve yet fish respond to them equally. Any one of them would be more than enough to find fish by catching them because isn't that what moving lures do - find fish over a large area? That's the difference using lures versus live bait: lures explore the water by you going to the fish whereas live bait can't and requires fish coming to it. It's one of the reasons I don't care for ice fishing (unless going crazy with cabin fever). It's a lot of work just to plunk down a lure through a hole and hope fish are beneath it.
Lastly, consider all the lure actions available to provoke fish to strike using the rod tip twitch & pause method. The top lure with no tail waddles.
The prong tail or Crappie Magnet tail quivers as does the thin flat tail.
The claw tail quivers & flaps up and down.
Curl tails flap like a flag in the wind but also vibrate when used with the overhead spinner.
Finesse worms that have a particular body and tail design slithers & darts with the least rod tip action, driving fish nuts!
Variety is the spice of fishing IMO. Why use one lure design when more catch just as many fish? The challenge of fishing requires anglers to first discover what fish will strike and lures make that a lot easier simply because of the huge variety available on any given day that work equally.