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I also like the fact that the FXone is set up for single handing.
It sounds like you've just started thinking about what you want to do, which is great, and welcome to the Hobie world! Both Tiberious and SRM offer great advice, given what little we know about what you want to do. I suggest this: maybe it's a 2-stage decision or a migration path you should think about. Entry level boats can still be fast and fly hulls while high tech racers are faster but often more expensive and harder to sail. If you find yourself getting into racing you can move from the first boat to the second, which is what I think SRM was getting at.
If racing is the primary consideration, I'd start by finding out what the folks sail where I want to race. If you're not sure what the main focus is then maybe learn by doing.
I sail a Hobie 16 single handed most of the time. I can move it around the beach by myself and I don't have to worry about dagger boards when I'm coming in hot and distracted, or pay attention to lots of strings to pull with a spinnaker. You can find them cheap, there are lots of spare parts around, and there are many racing fleets. But if you put more than 3 people on it you're in each other's way. They are fast but not as fast as the bigger, high tech racing catamarans and I think a spinnaker is too much power for it where I sail (Great Lakes) though people do disagree.
If you're taking out lots of people a Getaway with wings is lots of fun. I've pitchpoled one, so you can get them moving in heavy air. They are more indestructable than fiberglass boats. Hobie 18s are fun and not too expensive but too heavy for me to move around the beach by myself. They don't make them any more, so numbers could be dropping off (fleets, replacements). I'd be afraid I couldn't hold down a 20-foot cat by myself on a windy day.
If you want to go fastest and highest tech there are foiling models out there now that are like expensive sports cars. I really want to ride on one (but not own it).