Yes, Garron is correct. In no way should it be confused with being a perfect fix in all circumstances. NO wet sump is perfect, they simply cannot be by design. The different pan designs do have different limits, of which the G4 version is the top of the heap in this regard. However, your driving skill and setup are what determines whether each version is adequate for your use. A car on street tires or even slicks with a moderate driver would be hard pressed to exceed a Gen-4 based wet sump, ever. Even our seasoned full-race USGTU customers can get a full season out of a G4 Wet Sump with a substantial safety margin.
The cost of a dry-sump must be weighed. At least in the case of our engines, we have been able to get longevity with the Wet Sump high enough where the customer has a real decision if they are in hard competition: Spend the money on a dry-sump and refresh every two seasons, or don't and refresh every season. In either case, safety margins exist reliably.
For street cars or weekend warriors, a wet-sump based G4 pan will do you fine 99.9% of the time, which is a big leg up on older pan designs.