The most viscerally enjoyable bump runs for the majority of accomplished bumps skiers are not on the steepest, firmest, iciest, most stale metamorphosized snow, with most weirdly shaped challenging bumps, or those with fewest others descending, in other words, not the most difficult and challenging. Rather runs on slopes of moderate advanced gradients with packed powder natural snow conditions, with good numbers of accomplished bump skiers regularly skiing down them keeping surfaces loose and well formed, with a fun playground variety of changing slope gradients, trees and or obstacle changes. That is a prime reason as an example why MaryJane bumps are so loved by its fans with its high altitude snow, an army of practitioners, and nicely variable slopes with trees and lanes making it interesting.
I also prefer a run that starts out at lower gradients before encountering most steep sections so one can first develop a rhythm. Dropping into immediate steeps can be fine after one has already been skiing awhile during a day so one is already feeling their inner animal, but not so much early during a day. In the 80s, I skied a lot with a good friend that went to school at Stowe and he would often want to ski down Scott Chute at Alpine Meadows first thing in the morning when we had barely woken up. Examples of such slopes are Chute 75 at Squaw, Climax at Mammoth, and many others where immediate ridge line steep slopes have evolved so due to wind blown in snow eroding over centuries less sun exposed north facing steeps. Will also add, a bump slope that has a lift riding audience right along its slope rates highest for we show-offs haha. The negatives noted, Outer Limits can undoubtedly be that ideal slope on days after cold fresh snow storms before sun and weather changes surface conditions.