Here's a fixture I have covering our side garage door. It throws plenty of lumens for a good 30 yards or so.
It's really a matter of what you like from a design standpoint and how it works for your house's design cues.
I shopped Lowes/Home Depot and found better choices on Amazon.
For control/remote control:
I've done a full Samsung Smarthings implementation on our home.
For exterior lights, I find it best to deploy a Z-wave powered switch(
Link). This is to keep the cost (relatively) low for the use case in lieu of expensive fixtures like Ring Spotlights. I don't do motion, I have the lights turn on in the evening and run all night until morning. The cost of running LED is low enough not to care, and if it matters that much to you, you can program shorter run times over night.
Because you mentioned "WiFi control"
Consider setting up a hub-based Smart Home of some sort. I like both SmartThings and Hubitat. Research each one and determine on your needs. The big difference I see between the two is that Hubitat doesn't require the cloud for processing, while SmartThings does. Hubitat is also quite a bit more "tinkerable" than SmartThings, while SmartThings is pretty straightforward and keeps you out of trouble. Both are quite reliable foundations for home automation. It might even boil down to which mobile app you like better in regards to choice. Eventually, you might look at voice assisant(Google/Alexa) integration, which would kind of make the hub software less important.
With a hub, you can deploy devices like light switches, bulbs, door locks, door and window sensors, etc. A hub allows you to use wi-fi, Z-wave, and zigbee network based devices and get them all wrangled in and managed by a single app platform. On this platform, you can schedule on/off routines, monitor security of doors and windows, and even unlock doors for a visitor while on vacation.
I prefer Z-Wave/Zigbee devices as I prefer to keep the IOT stuff off my Wi-Fi network as much as possible, keeping it all on it's own Z-Wave/Zigbee network. Some things like cameras, you're stuck with using wifi, but there are methods to segregate that traffic too if you desire.
I acknowledge that setting up a smart home system requires a little more initial cost and setup than simply slapping up a few Ring spotlights, paying the monthly subscription and using their app for control. But if you consider a deeper "smart home" deployment, using a hub is considerably more scalable. A lot of our interior lights are "controlled" and the family appreciate that the heat turns on shortly before everyone wakes up for comfort, we can use voice commands to turn on/off lights or start music or fire up Netflix. So now's a good time to consider the option.
...I need one battery powered w/solar charging for the furthest corner of the property. It would be nice if it was from the same manufacturer as the wired versions.
I've seem to remember seeing a brand that connected multiple fixtures. When one sensed motion, it was able to turn on one or more of the others...
The previous owner of our home installed these. Mr. Beams is the brand. I'm not a fan. Powered by "D" batteries, they yield poor light and the "linked" connection is not very reliable. I'd probably just look at a solar powered LED spotlight for the far corner light.
I've been doing the home automation thing for a few years now. Feel free to ask away.