I'm not a fan of additives - I mean run the oil you need. One of the things my old instructor used to say is the best case when oils are combined is the lowest level of protection of the weakest portion and I still just don't feel additives are the answer. These are specialty cars and don't rack up the miles like they used to. Most guys will have no trouble dropping $70 on race fuel for a track day, but for some reason balk at spending $70 for oil three times a season. Brad Penn, Joe Gibbs, full synthetics, whatever you need is fine. The break in is critical - and the break in includes the very first fire up and any turning over before that firing. You just can't do it like we used to when you run an aggressive, modern flat tappet.
As for bushing the bores I do it for several reasons:
Oil control - Not just controling the leakage at max lift in those blocks that have the spot facing and height issue, which is what the full body lifters do, but also controlling all lifter leakage in any scenario including in the case of valvetrain failure where the lifter can kick out of the bore, dumping all oil pressure to the lower end. You cannot shut it down fast enough to prevent the lower end from getting destroyed if you lose something on the right side of the engine at speed. Tubing can also do that for less money, but tubing doesn't do anything else for you which leads me to...
Lifter position correction - The factory couldn't get the decks, main bores, or cylinder bores mahined in the right spots. What makes anyone think the lifter bores are any better? The angle they're drilled on and the position in relation to the lobe can be off - a lot. If you've read about Hughes having issues when they first started out it wasn't the cams, but the fact that the cams depended too much on the factory angles being "just right" between the lobe and lifter face and they're not. I tend to use .875 lifter profiles for my custom cams with very aggressive rates of lift for that reason. Bushing using a modern CNC mill can address that very effectively. This will help valvetrain stability which translates into more power, and more usable rpm. It also means longer lifter life between rebuilds which can be an issue for street cars with bigger spring pressures. Tubing doesn't help that. Drop in lifters don't help that.
Bushing costs $500 during the block machining. A roller cam small block will have a budget of $10K give or take, more for a big horsepower stroker with some real heads from a competent shop. Are the benefits worth 5% or less of the total budget? Only you and your builder can say. I can make the same power as any hydraulic roller tappet engine with flat tappets. Anyone that says they're worth any power over a solid flat tappet is full of crap. The ONLY good things about them is you can run the cheapest oil and really ignore having the engine's first start go right. I built an engine running stand to be able to properly manage that part but I understand that others don't have that sort of stuff. It's all relative to an individual's situation.