6.2 engines
are good. Compared to an sbc, they require slightly different (not particularly worse) maintenance, and they aren't drag racing engines. They are designed for mileage and 1980s-era towing. They are very simple and dependable. It has the simplicity of a 1-wire engine with the dependability of fuel injection. No sensors, no tuning, just put 12V on the fuel solenoid and it runs. As a rough comparison, there are about a 1/2-dozen specific issues that can arise with a 6.2 engine. If you look at your current TBI engine, and start counting sensors, you'll find that it has a couple dozen potential failure points. In neither case do you expect all of them to fail, but you know that some of them will eventually.
I don't think you'll be any less happy with a 6.2 than you are with your current engine. You should expect to change a set of glow plugs (like spark plugs, but less often). If you buy an older one (pre-1988) you may have to learn how to mechanically prime the fuel system at some point. Harmonic balancer should be replaced if it's loose or knocking. But that's true for any engine.
You may or may not find the 6.2 a good fit for your purposes. But don't go around thinking it's hard to work on, or that it's a bad commuter engine just because it won't beat a 454 in a quarter mile. And definitely don't go around thinking it's an overbored 350 block that likes to blow up. Not sure how that rumor got started.