It's worth noting that the 60-lumen difference between the Nichia and Cree XP-G Warm emitters will be most obvious in two scenarios: 1) lighting up something far away, or 2) spot-lighting something that's already partially lit by area lighting.
The first scenario would benefit the most from a cool emitter anyway, because cool emitters are always produce the most lumens per watt. In the second scenario, if the purpose is photography, you definitely want to use a Hi-CRI emitter for spot-lighting because the camera will show the skewing effects from a non-Hi-CRI emitter much more strongly than your own vision will; if the purpose isn't photography, the tint of the emitter probably doesn't matter anyway since you already have area lighting skewing your retinas' perception of color.
General task-lighting, such as lighting up the sidewalk on a nighttime walk or fiddling with circuit breakers in a dark basement, won't be significantly affected by the lower output of the Hi-CRI emitter. All of this is to say, if you want a warm emitter, you might as well get a Hi-CRI emitter anyway, just so you have that option available to you.