Good replacements probably don't exist, so you'll just have to find something you can live with IMO. (even for normal sized bulbs, the
Yuji LED bulbs are one of the best you can get but aren't quite at "top tier" level yet for LED lighting)
At least if you go with a trusted brand like Philips/Osram, it's extremely unlikely that the seller/store will mislabel the colour temperature. The Philips 2W G4 bulbs I can get at the local hardware store at least have a data sheet with the CCT and CRI (3000K, 80 CRI, still sucks but we don't get a choice).
I've used a bunch of Philips LED bulbs (B22 base, typical for old Aussie homes) around the house and they kind of drop like flies after a year or two. Light output quality is terrible but there isn't much we can expect for a bulb the price of a Big Mac.
It sounds like you're aware of CCT and CRI, but another important metric is the tint (Duv, deviation from the blackbody locus). Lots of LED lighting has a positive Duv or a "greenish" tint, and it's hard enough finding something neutral let alone negative Duv or "rosy". Even those Yuji bulbs linked earlier have a disgusting green tint as they lie above the BBL.
Attached is a photo comparison I did for some torch enthusiasts. Bottom left is a typical LED bulb you can buy from the store, bottom right is using a LED strip with arguably the best LEDs on the planet (Nichia Optisolis, used for art galleries and museums). You probably don't even know it but I feel like a lot of people hate most neutral-cool CCT LED lights because of the tint, and many gravitate towards warmer temperatures because the green is a little less noticeable, but it's still there.
Don't even get me started about the CRI R9 values, and how many "high CRI" lights have R9 values of 50 or lower.
