Well I don't have a Stinger - and you'll have to forgive me for the wall of text. But there is not a simple answer to the typical "What's the best brakes?" question which I get often.
First - about the car.
It's a high HP heavy car. And no manual trans correct? That's a tough combo since there is no engine braking ever.
Typical aggressive street driving leads to hot brakes at a stop and all of a sudden the rotors are 'warped'

Now what? The dealer turns the 'warped' rotors - car leaves and we do it again and get the same results. Now you and the 'tech' at the dealer wonder what to do. Throw parts at the car, demand warranty, Karen calls in the manager. We've all been there.
Add to that the semi-odd pad shapes with the damn counterweights and no good alternatives and here we are.
So:
Usually 'Brembo' pads (Corvette's, STi's and so on - often a Ferodo HP1000 compound) are quite good but are dusty/$$/sometimes loud and yes they get after the rotors a bit. But they work. In some cases however the owner base finds this dust/noise quite unacceptable. Brembo does not care - they make it stop.
Obviously Kia did not quite spend as much - - they use good sized discs but the smaller 4-piston 1001 pad shape front setup and the newer rear 2-piston rear setup. Worse yet - is the lack of choices in the rear shape but it is starting to loosen.
Anyway it depends on what you want/need. Like tires there is no one best answer. Different ones do different things. Pads work best in a range of categories.
So for many Brembo car owners who cars&coffee only go with a low dust ceramic.. It works to clean up - but stopping power is not improved. For those users the Centric/Stoptech ceramic street pads are fine -- and those owners likely even wonder what the fuss is about.
It remains to be seen if they will have the same issues as the OEM pads as they are pretty new in the Kia rear shape but it's the same class of pad so its logical to expect similar results.
If you drive quite a bit harder though you may want more stopping power and less incidence of judder - i.e. a stronger pad that can heat up with less issue. Generally that requires a metallic compound. Hawk HPS/HPS 5.0 are often maligned but after selling a jillion of them and others - I get almost no 'warranty' or other issues. They may require some pedal effort but they stop well, they almost never judder, and they get even a bit better with some heat. Problem is no rears yet and they may not come soon.
Drive it like a Camry - get the Stopech's front and rear. They are dwindling in again for the rears. The fronts won't have weights and the rears are coming in both but it's only a few.
Drive it harder - decide on the rears first. GLoc makes a ceramic pad that is better than most but it's still primarily a low dust solution. Might be a few users here who can comment.
I'd probably say the Porterfield R4-S is a good street solution if you need front and rear. They are similar to Hawk HPS and front and rear with out weights are available.
Or..find the Euro spec pads - if they are Ferodo's ....they will be good.
Happy Holidays