There are lots of good oils. Few can honestly say they "increase" power, mostly oils provide "protection." The protection comes from the additives, and not from the base oil. Sorry, but Group IV, PAO, ester, diester, etc help determine the lowest temperature at which it will flow (and we're comparing -30F to -40F) and to some degree, the high temperature oxidation resistance, but the additives are what deliver the anti-wear, detergents, dispersants, corrosion protection, multi-grade capability, and friction modification. The base oil is a nice carrier for the stuff you eventually want to flush out.
Almost all diesel oil is mineral oil, but has 2X to 3X the additives that passenger oils do. Over the road trucks also go 40,000 to 100,000 miles on oil drains. (And yes, they have 8 to 10 gallon sumps.)
For instance, the most common reason an oil gets dark quickly is because the dispersants pick up "dirt" and start to carry it around. Beware of an oil that doesn't turn dark.
Another fun fact is that "like dissolves like." Oxidation and other "dirt" from fuel contamination is much more like a mineral oil in composition that the synthetic base oil. Therefore a mineral oil will help clean and carry away deposits better than synthetics. Of course, this is in the absence of additives, but again it shows the importance of additives over base oils.
In the end, all oils have additives, and eventually they get used up. The trick is to change your oil before they get used up. Once you add power adders, you may wonder what to do... I suggest you change your oil every 250 gallons of fuel consumed. Why?
5000 miles at 20 MPG = 250 gallons.
Plug in your own numbers if you like, but the blowby, fuel dilution, stress, heat, etc, are pretty much related to how much fuel you use.