Doesn't matter what you got, as long as you know how to use it. I like the multieffects pedals for what I do. The thing is, when you listen to them at a music store on a small amp at a lower than stage volume, they sound great with all the sustain in the world. Run it at a high volume in a real band situation though, and you get that "swarm of bees" sound. This is because they program them with lots of gain so that they sound great off the showroom floor. It's like an amp. If playing at a low volume at home, you'll crank the gain more, but if you turn the master up, you have to come down on the gain to make it cut through. Multieffects pedals are the same way. I program them at a high volume to get the sound I want.
Our band opened at a club for some friends of mine that put together a local "Supergroup" comprised of various members of now defunct local bands. All were good players and had great equipment. Both guitarists had bought the new Boss multieffects pedals (at the time) and I was using an older version that I had had for about 4 or 5 years. They were a four piece and we were a three piece. When we got up to play, I just hooked up my older Boss pedal into their lead guitarist's Laney amp. We jammed away and everything went smooth. Then they got up to play and here come the bees. I was walking around the room and this guy who was a friend of theirs, but didn't really know me from Adam, came up to me and said, "I got one question. How come your guitar is the only one in here that sounds like it's got balls?"
It's all in the programming, baby!!
They had brand new pedals, Gibson Les Pauls, Strats, Teles, Esp guitars, Laney stacks, Fender stacks, and were actually, to me, more accomplished guitarists. Me, I walked in with my old beat up pedal and my pawnshop Hamer Slammer guitar (that I had tweaked the whammy and lockdown and replaced the pickups) and had tone for days while they were creating quite a buzz (bees).
Ya gotta have the sound down.