People who use knives for their living do not pick those with the very hardest steels, but those that are easy to frequently resharpen during the workday. All my deer cleaning is done in camp and I often use two different knives and resharpen them as necessary with an F.Dick hypersteel. When I cut fish with the professionals, we use Dexter Russel knives and the same steel. Again, we use different knives for different species of fish.
Those using knives for a living are rarely more than three steps from a steel for touching up that softer steel.
Now I'm going to say something that might offend some. It is pretty rare to find a man who can sharpen a knife. They end up buying a new knife when the old one gets dull. They get the most use from a very good steel with a wicked sharp factory edge.
A good friend of mine is an example. He gave away a nice Spiderco folder. As it happens he gave it to another friend of mine, a former meat cutter, third generation meat cutter by the way. He could not sharpen that knife, and he tried. Well, I had sorta bragged on my ability to get a good shaving edge on every knife I had ever owned. He sorta chuckled and asked if I could take this Spiderco home and tune it up. I spent a good ten minutes working on that thing to no avail at all.
It was a nice VG10 steel and it had been rounded over so bad I had to start from scratch. Starting from a coarse stone through very fine, working methodically for about an hour I put a shaving edge on that thing. When I returned it the new owner asked how I did. I told him I worked my tail off and it was Okay.
He tested it a bit, then went to the arm hair which while not popping were coming right off. He was incredulous
he just knew I had been blowing smoke about sharpening knives all this time. The truth is I was beginning to consider sending it back to the factory to save face.
That steel is danged tough, and unless you are willing to put in the work softer steels
are in fact better.