If you shot the PSE X-Force it is very similiar to the Mathews Monster in its draw cycle. Both the Monster and X-Force are very radical cams with very short brace heights. You may know what that means and if you do, I dont mean to offend but in laymans terms, they are not as forgiving or as easy to shoot. That is the sacrifice for speed.
Many good bows out there and I agree with wishin4dogs when he said shoot as many different bows as you can and go with what feels the best.
I do disagree that a Kodiak "blows away any Mathews, BT or Hoyt for smoothness both on the draw or on the shot"
Also, put very little stock in IBO speed ratings for bows. First off you pay for that speed with very radical cams and draw cycles as well as smoothness, handshock and forgiveness. Second, you will never come close to those IBO speeds with a hunting set up. Its impossible and anyone who tells you otherwise is not chronographing their arrows. Speed is not the end all anyway.
Pay attention to brace height. You give up some speed but the larger that number, the more forgiving the bow is which translates into shootability. Anything above 7" and closer to 8" will translate into a very smooth and forgiving hunting rig. Also worth noting is, the faster you shoot, the more you give up the ability to shoot fixed blade heads. The faster the arrow, the harder it is to stabalize an arrow tipped with a fix blade, sometimes even with a perfectly tuned bow.
I shoot a 2009 Hoyt Alpha Max 32 with a 7" brace height. I am shooting 76 lbs with a 27 1/2" draw length. I am pushing 400 grain Easton Axis arrows at 295 fps which is very fast for a hunting rig. I generate about 77 ft lbs of Kinetic Energy with that set up. Despite that fact, the bow is quiet, smooth and easy to shoot very well. What I found interesting was that I can shoot a lighter all carbon arrow (about 30 to 35 grains lighter) and I can break the 300 fps mark. What I did not really gain was any more Kinetic Energy because while I increase speed I suffer a loss in mass (weight). So there is a point where an increase in speed yields minimal gains to no gains.
I do agree that the Hoyts are bullet proof but many bow companies are producing some excellent bows including but not limited to Hoyt, Bow Tech, Diamond, Mathews, PSE, Kodiak, High Country, Bear, Parker and now even Limb Saver. Any and all will do the job if they feel good and allow you to slip a sharp broadhead into the boiler room.