Better, but you'll have to work on that South Texas accent.
Let's compare speeds, since my Atlas has been labeled as "slow". He has been blessed with every speed mod ever made for the Cherokee line, by a wealthy previous owner. As a result, we flight plan 142 knots, and can always count on 140.
The Bonanza F33A, from your earlier example, is fully 30 knots faster, at 170 knots. A huge difference.
Sadly, even with extended range tanks it only carries 74 gallons of fuel to feed that 285 horsepower engine, giving it an effective VFR range of just a smidge over 700 nautical miles. Some only have 50 gallon tanks, giving it a paltry 515 nm range.
Compare this to my Pathfinder, with 84 gallons on board, and it's astounding 910 nautical mile range. Sure, the Bo is going faster, but on an 800 mile trip, I will beat it every time. Sometimes the tortoise wins.
Then, that whole weight & balance thing. That aft CG problem with Bonanzas can really mess things up, and makes loading a PIA. You're always worried about keeping the heavy stuff up-front -- something that is only mildly concerning in the Pathfinder -- making it hard to use the Bonanza's 1100 pound useful load. In the Pathfinder, if you've got 1460 pounds of bowling balls, just roll 'em in. She'll fly.
Then there's that one-door thing. Oh, wait -- it was copied from the Bonanza, which stupidly also has only one door -- and on the wrong side, to boot! Thus proving that marketing departments can be dumb everywhere.
So, I'm still standing pat. If you're looking for the best compromise between speed, useful load, economy, looks, and all around comfort, IMHO the Pathfinder/Dakota is the best 4-seat airplane out there.