Hi RobertS,
I really like my Kawai MP11 dpiano, particularly for its excellent dynamic responses and yet playing softly deeper into the keys is still a pleasure too. If I was updating I'd definitely begin by looking at the MP11SE.
For my good points, it handles forceful playing very well, solidly and I feel it can't ever feel like I might harm it - so never feel I'm pulling back or coddling, like with some others I've owned which were not as sturdy or had much less realistic physical actions (springy or lacking mechanical reactivity to variant pressures). Best I found for both ppp thru fff.
Also it is really fabulous with steep ranges of kinetic effort to elicit tones. I haven't been able to genuinely feel this in an equally good way with other dpianos I'd tried.
We all enjoy our own unique preferences though, and certainly now there will be some dpianos I'd enjoy too if looking today.
For my purposes though, it gives me a quite directly similar tactile sense to the Shigeru Kawai I've played before buying the dpiano.
Others will have recommendations and good things to say of their choices, all valid - the best and perhaps only way to know which one to purchase will come from physically testing in a store if you can.. also like my Shigeru experience, well worth finding and playing a while a particular traditional piano you would love to own and give enough time to finding the dpiano which will inspire you most in similar ways.
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors