If the Hoppes products have worked well for you these past 60 years, then there's nothing wrong with sticking to them.
I have my cops use CLP and/or Ballistol for routine maintenance and cleaning on their Glocks and M4's.
Each year me and my armorers perform a full armorers maintenance/servicing/inspection on the entire department's weapons. Due to the sheer numbers, we have to be efficient, so we use Sharp Shooter foaming bore solvent to break down carbon and copper fouling. It says it's "brushless cleaning", but we found using a brass bore brush with the foam speeds up the cleaning process. Just make sure you rinse your brass bore brushes off with alcohol, brake cleaner or even water after your done, otherwise the foam breaks down your bore brush. After cleaning, we lube with CLP, you can lube with just about any oil (Hoppes, Ballistol, motor oil, sewing machine oil, 3 in 1 oil, etc) for most firearms and they should run fine.
If you plan to use foaming bore cleaner in an AR type weapon, the foam gets into the gas tube from the barrel's gas port. Not a big issue, but we use a can of brake cleaner with the straw attachment to flush out the gas tube. Probably an un necessary step, but we don't want the foam to seep back into the barrel through the gas port after we clean it.
If you are cleaning plastic wad fouling from a shotgun barrel, we found Shooters Choice shotgun choke cleaner softens the plastic fouling better than other solvents. It really saves us a lot of time, but it's messy and it stinks, lots of nasty fumes.