Hakka's high-end tires consistently come out on top in Swedish newspaper Aftenbladet's annual tire tests, whose results are based on snow, ice, slush, wet pavement, and dry pavement conditions, and include acceleration, braking and handling (on a short "track") components.
According to the test results, studded tires are not a liability for dry braking. I think what's going on now is that companies who offer studded tires are doing so with so-called "friction tire" (a la Blizzak) compounds, so you get the best of both grip strategies.
Notably, Adtenbladet tests studded tires separately from the studless because, on average, the studded tires appreciably outperform the studless, especially on ice, which is unsurprising. (I see that Tirerack is now sending testers to Sweden for their own tests, but they still poo-poo studded tires.)
When I ran winter Alcan 5000 in '08 (5,000+ miles in 11 days), we ran studded Hakka 2s. While most of the event was on snow/ice, we did have significant highway miles on pavement as well (from Seattle to BC and Banff to Seattle). I think modern, premium studded tires are quieter than in the past, as neither my friend nor I went crazy from listening to the drone (yes, the tread is not silent). I do know that some of the newer Hakkas have a soft "pad" beneath each stud into which the stud retracts when on pavement, thus quieting them somewhat.
A lot of the Alcan competitors ran Hakkas (I'd say a majority), but some ran Hankooks and Coopers. In some cases, there was sponsorship involved with the latter two brands, but I don't recall anyone wishing that they had better tires. IIRC, Hankook makes a Hakka knock-off that's said to be pretty good but not as expensive. Those who ran studless Blizzaks did really well, too; the grip on the ice racing elements (basically autox on ice, not full-on racing) was impressive.
Finally, I put a Quaife on one of my Saabs and had it out in the snow last year, with snow tires. Being able to turn what is essentially a one-wheel-drive car into a true two-wheel-drive made a HUGE difference in forward grip, to the extent that I would love to put a Quaife on my daily driver, too, just for the improved winter grip.