So do I.
Marston's original in Priscilla was unique at the time and I love H.G. Peters' character design.
The first incarnation of Cheetah I ever came across is the one from Challenge of the Superfriends and I still occasionally hear Marlene Aragon's voice in my head when I read stories involving Cheetah.
I was aware of Debbie Domaine, in general as the Bronze Age Cheetah, through some of the licensing at the time and I know that sometime later in the 90s I read her origin story in those Wonder Woman issues with Kobra. My fondest thought and accolade for Deborah as a gay youngster is that her bodysuit had connected high-heel boots, instead of as two separate pieces.
Barbara Minerva is imprinted on me as "my" Cheetah, just because Perez gave her such a powerful and horrific origin. One of my favorite things about Barbara Minerva is that I almost like her more and think she's more dangerous than the Cheetah - unfortunately her intelligence and haughty ways are always squandered IMHO.
The Justice League animated series Cheetah is kind of a non-entity, given she had barely any development or fixation on ruining Diana. Which is okay, since it gave the writers a chance to have some fun with Giganta eventually.
The Justice League animated movies Cheetah is okay. A bit one-note, if you ask me, but I like a Cheetah who can throw down with Wonder Woman, Superman, and the Flash alike.
The version in Batman: The Brave and the Bold animated series was kind of fun in all her Silver and Bronze-Age-y glory in the episode Triumvirate of Terror. It was nice to see Cheetah stand side-by-side with her equals, Lex Luthor and Joker.
As a Doctor Poison mentioned, Alex Ross's version is a great reimagining of Priscilla Rich.
Sebastian Ballesteros was a good supporting character for Barbara to set her sights upon. I like when Wonder Woman's enemies also eventually develop partnerships or enmities amongst themselves.
I like where Simone and McDuffie were going with Cheetah in their Wonder Woman and Justice League runs respectively, as a leader of the Society, but both runs were cut short before she could get a grand story.
I disliked her Forever Evil one-shot with the aunt who ran a commune, etc. because it was just way too on-the-nose of an origin that mirrored Diana's. I'm glad that got jettisoned quickly.
She was okay in the DCnU, but I'd have kept her origin outside of being a member of ARGUS. It was too connect-y to Wonder Wonder at the time, when I think the Perez origin stands a bit outside other Wonder concepts and broadens Wonder Woman concepts and her world.
I appreciate Rucka's work with Barbara in both his runs, but I can't say Barbara as the maligned former friend/redeemed future ally is my favorite. I get and enjoyed her character arc and the emotions behind it, but we'll have to see where it gets taken. I like the Cheetah as a strong force for evil in the DCU and I can't shake that she hasn't had enough stories about that yet, for her potential redemption (or fake redemption to get close to Diana) to be even more of an powerful character arc and universe story arc for the DCU. Yeah, I believe in Barbara that much.
I know she's appeared in some other animated series and the Super Hero Girls cartoons, but I haven't watched enough of them to have an opinion.
What I know I do like is when both the Barbara and Cheetah personalities are represented and she's not just portrayed as a wifcat.
(Something I learned in 2018 is that "wer" in Old English means man, as in werewolf or man wolf. So you wouldn't call Barbara a werecat "man cat" or werewoman "man woman." In Old English you'd use "wif" or "wyf" to mean woman, so lady werewolves would be wifwolves and Barbara a wyfcat. Apparently, the word "woman" came about when wer became man and began to mean an "adult human being" a long time ago and was paired with wyf as wyfman to eventually become woman and mean an "adult female human being.")