its kind of up to you. the LSC will make a difference you can tune in
but a 2.0 shock can only take so much for high speed and low speed on that heavy front end before you are just well past its capabilities. the really stiff stock torsions actually kinda help make up for its lack of control under heavy use, its just a matter of getting the shock rebound under control, if it can control it. you could always put a small flutter in the compression stack if it just doesnt smooth out but i would be curious what they even send you for internal valving like: how many bleed holes are open, what the stack height is, and what shim thickness used. the LSC is a great way to slow/stop cavitation behind the piston head from the IFP moving when it shouldnt be. In other words, you plug all the piston bleed holes, put a .020 shim stack on compression, go out and hit some hard hits off road. What happens is the 200psi of nitrogen pressure isnt enough to force the oil through the valving stack and make it work correctly, instead, the IFP compresses the nitrogen and no valving action happens (this can make you chase your tail when valving). it also creates cavitation behind the piston and it eats up the piston and shims over time. So the LSC is another shim stack in the resi (older style lsc are just bleed holes) and an orifice you are now adjusting to allow a certain amount of fluid to enter the resi at a specific rate. this combats the IFP plunge and makes the shock valving work better. another bandaid is more nitrogen pressure in the resi up to about 320psi, beyond that you run the risk of blowing the canister off the caps under full shock compression.
so its really dependent on your driving style. its very hard to make a 2.0 shock, torsions, and 4k unsprung front end with 8-10" of wheel travel be smooth on and off road while driving semi aggressive.
if it were me, i would save for a set of external bypass shocks in the 2.5 or larger area. thats going to get you the closest to having your cake and eating it too. thats a "best case". if i was to be more budget minded, id take a set of the LSC shocks and put them on the front but i would also be very much willing to valve them my self. you first need to know what shim stack is in there and how many bleed holes are open (generally they come with 2 bleeds open), put it on the truck and drive it. see how it feels on wash boards or on rough road. then take some bigger hits with speed like ruts or areas where the front end is using alot suspension movement. note how it feels and you can always post here. i can help you through tuning them. lots of ways to skin a cat in there and you really cant be "wrong" if it rides how you like it. its opinion based. id have no issue putting 2.0's on my truck and have contemplated doing that sooner than later. the stock ranchos dont have enough rebound for my liking though they are miles ahead of the older gen stock shocks.
rear is difficult to be smooth all the time, extremely light compared to the spring rate used = difficult shock tuning. cant work miracles