I'd say the Nexus/Alfine 8 speed hub Indalo, enough gear range for an e-bike anywhere in the UK, especially with a Pansonic system.
When a non e-bike or a very low powered one there are other aspects that I didn't cover above, these connected to where the direct drive gear is. With the exception of the Nexus 7 gear hub with has only indirect gears, hubs have one gear as a direct drive where the rear sprocket just drives the wheel so is at 100% efficiency. That's normally the middle or almost middle gear, on the Nexus/Alfine 8 it's 5th gear from the bottom. The further a gear is from that direct drive, the greater the inefficiency, so the majority who ride in top gear most of the time are suffering some poor efficiency.
It follows that riders in flattish territory who don't need very low gears could change their sprockets setup to leave the direct drive gear at the speed they mostly cycle at, getting derailleur-like overall 99% transmission efficiency. The top three gears would then be overdrives.
One hub gear is an exception to the above, the Sunrace-Sturmey 8 speed hub has the very unusual arrangement of direct drive being bottom gear, meaning it's top gear far removed from that is very inefficient. That might seem silly, but there are benefits. It means that when climbing the steepest hills in bottom gear one gets the best efficiency with no watts of exertion wasted when each one is precious. Conversely, the most inefficiency is when the going is easiest of all on the flat when one has some watts to spare.
The other bonus of this Sturmey system is that the chainwheel is very small due to all rear gearing being upwards. Therefore with front and rear sprockets being near to equal and of good size, the chain transmission enjoys high efficiency, there's less likelyhood of chainring damage and it's very easy to arrange small very compact chainguards. As ever though there's a catch, that's the fact that most time is usually spent in upper gears so the sum of the inefficiency experienced is high.
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