I have read that the design of any optical system involves compromises, i.e. to achieve excellent results in one area requires giving something up in another area. I do not recall what the compromise was for this particular concern, but it may have been depth of field or field width. Regardless, your existing scopes are clearly superior optical instruments but may in fact not be providing what you desire.
If I were in your shoes I would visit a store that has a vast array of scopes on hand and spend an hour or two looking through some that meet your criteria in regards to construction quality, optical quality, zoom range, etc. and select the one that provides the sight picture you want.
If you could live with a lesser quality scope I suggest a a low magnification range Leupold VX-II or better, or even a fixed FX-II or better. Why do I say this? I recently purchased a Leupold 2-7x33 VX-II and was simply shocked at how easy it was to position the scope in front of my eye and get a perfect sight picture. No vignetting, no "tunnel vision", amazing fore and aft as well as lateral range of suitable eye postion, etc. I have scopes that have better optical qualities, and that cost more money, but none that provide such a pleasing ability to give me the sight picture I desire for a hunting rig.