I recently got Edea Chorus, which is one step up in stiffness from Overture. Overall, I've been pleased with them. They are a little hard to keep tied tightly, so I got the Edea "lace straps" and that helps. If you look around the internet, this is not an uncommon problem. My heel is relatively "average," but the front of my feet are a little wide. I was previously very well fitted in Jacksons (no punching out needed) and found Riedell a little narrow in the toe area (but ok). With the Chorus, my heel felt fine, and the ball a little tight initially, but after molding with a heat gun by the fitter they opened up and were more or less perfect.
I skate between 2-6 hours a week, depending. I do single jumps and work on axel. I've only had the skates since December so I can't comment on breakdown. But there was virtually no break-in period - comfy from day one. However, Edea takes a shorter blade than most boots (than for instance, my old Jacksons) and that took me a bit to adjust to (it also meant I had to invest in a new pair of blades). The fitter did have me try on Concerto and Ice Fly too. The Concerto felt too stiff (if I remember correctly), and I did like the Ice Fly, but as the Chorus felt good too, I decided to save the money.
I second the advice to find a good fitter - try on a couple different models (and try some other brands for comparison while you're at it). I tried on a new pair of Jacksons (same as my old pair) at the same time I was trying on the Chorus and I just loved the Chorus in comparison, but that's me. Talk to the fitter about appropriateness for your height/weight too - adults often have stiffer boots than comparably skilled kids. I knew my fitter was charging more money than what I could order off the internet but the knowledge and service and ability to come back for adjustments if necessary more than made the difference worth it. Good luck!