I liked levers right off, both for the history behind them and them being left hand friendly.
Plus, my preferred hunting in the Northern Rockies over 45 years was to get into the thick timber and get up close and personal. Also, from hunting during the early archery season with a longbow or recurve, I was used to getting close to elk.
So an Marlin .45-70 with a peep was perfect.
But I can't understand buying a .45-70 for the cool factor.
They aren't bad to shoot repeatedly if you are shooting blackpowder equivalent out of a 12 lb. Sharps, Hi-Wall or Rolling Block.
But even the lighter loads out of a 6.5 lb. carbine will get your attention.
If you want a fun, cheap to feed, low recoil but still potent lever carbine, get a .357.
I loved having the big boomers when I lived in Montana and Wyoming, but since retiring in Arizona, these days I'm down to a Rossi .357, A 1956 Mountie and a BL-22.
I carried the original half magazine 22 inch 1895 that came out in the 70's, but towards the end got a Remlin CBA, it has the 18 inch octagon barrel, so it is a shorter barrel Cowboy.
It was a fine carbine once I smoothed the rough loading gate edges.
Oh yeah, the 1883 and 1923 series would do a lot more for lever action sales than the current Yellowstone series, If more people had seen the prequels. Excellent shows.