Dude, its not the plow; its the amount of snow! I used to have a dodge dakota, with a 6.5 foot fisher "real" plow to do my 500' gravel driveway. (I'm up on the North Shore). I made the same mistake one time...plowed at 10pm, with the same intent on getting up every few hours...but fell asleep.

and this was heavy, wet snow, too. anyway, next morning, there was 18" (above the blade) of snow, and I knew I was in big trouble. couldn't possibly push my way out, because the truck simply can't push that much snow. even with a "real" plow...doesn't make a different.
I couldn't even lift the blade above the snow, and muscle my way out to the street without pushing snow. what I wound up doing was raising it up all the way, then got a couple of cement blocks under the blade to keep it jacked up. then I re-adjusted the chain so I could lift it even higher. With the blade finally above the snow, I was able to "bush-whack" my way out to the street. got stuck several times, and had to dig out. (even in 4wheel-low). took several hours to get to the street. Once I got there, and had some bare pavement to start on, I was able to push across the driveway at an angle...back up, push the other way, zig-zagging my way in.
I've been similarly stuck with a 1-ton truck, working for a contractor, plowing city streets. after a storm was over, we went to start on the schools...they wanted me to go open up a driveway that hadn't been touched during the storm....didn't work. you just can't move that much snow with a truck. only "heavy equipment" is capable. you always have to go with the storm, regardless of the plow. (bigger trucks come w/ bigger plows, and they will reach the limit of their pushing ability just as quickly...you get a few feet, then you just stop, with a wall of snow in front of you.).
Anyway, I've been thinking about getting one of these "personal" plows. sold my old dakota a few years ago, replaced it with a full size ram 1/2 ton, and have been paying someone to do my driveway, because they were so cheap. (not only that, but you're not supposed to put a plow on this model truck, as it is a "quad cab"). well, they do a lousy job. AND, they use gargantuan 3/4 ton trucks w/ 8' plows that dig the driveway up terribly. but I can't complain much, because they're so cheap. (average $300 per year for the last 5 years...just can't justify buying ANY plow, compared to that price). Well...their price keeps going up, and up...and now, these home-owner plows are starting to look more attractive to me. I'm intrigued by the "snowsport" model, too. about the same $$, but no lift. just wondering how well it can stack. OTOH...it looks like it would do minimal damage to my gravel driveway @120lbs, and I have another use for a front receiver. But I understand snow-bear has a receiver mounted model, too. (do you know how heavy the snowbear is?)
decisions, decisions....not alot of posts here from snowsport users. I'd like to hear more user reports. but from yours and other's reports on the SB, I'm sure it would do the job quite nicely.