Well, LEDs would make sense as high-output types have become cheap and common in the last 10 years.
As far as strobes go, I've had to deal with strobe guns in printing, as they are used to view stop-action handling of paper in
in presslines, high-speed imaging, etc.
There's really only 3 failures.
The switching oscillator power supply, the tube itself, or the trigger circuit.
Or random bad connections, acts of God, abuse, etc.
I have a strobe photoflash from 1960 (Graflex) that uses 2 225 volt battery bricks in an RC circuit that doesn't need to whine or sing, and
was always ready to flash almost as fast as you could advance the film (no motors in them days).
The original tube hasn't died yet, and because there's no switcher to heat up and suffer parts failure, it would probably work today if
I put new batteries in it , which I think are available.