Donald Knuth answered this question nearly half a century ago:
Programmers waste enormous amounts of time thinking about, or worrying about, the speed of noncritical parts of their programs, and these attempts at efficiency actually have a strong negative impact when debugging and maintenance are considered. We should forget about small efficiencies, say about 97% of the time: premature optimization is the root of all evil. Yet we should not pass up our opportunities in that critical 3%.
The performance of a random number generator implementation is almost certainly going to be irrelevant to the overall performance of your application*. In other words, asking about performance of an RNG is an effectively useless question; you might as well ask how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. These are microbenchmarks, and they are the root of all evil to which Knuth refers: the canonical example in programming of missing the forest for the trees.
But in the context of Stack Overflow, performance-type questions are heavily discouraged for the simple reason that, in the words of one of my favourite Age of Empires 2 game casters, It Depends:
- A particular implementation will be fastest when run on one particular hardware configuration; but when you change hardware, a different implementation is faster. (This is also why answers that benchmark different implementations are fundamentally useless wastes of bytes. I don't care how fast it is on your hardware, it's gonna be running on mine.)
- A particular implementation will have been fastest in the past, and highly-upvoted answers will suggest to use it; but since those answers were posted a newer, faster implementation has been developed.
- A particular implementation was fastest in the past, but hardware optimisations have made another implementation(s) faster.
- A particular implementation will be fastest but difficult to use, while another will be slower but far easier to use.
All of the above, and far more, combine to ensure that there cannot ever be a single objective answer to "which is fastest?". And as Stack Overflow questions are intended to generate objective answers, such questions are therefore inherently off-topic.
* Unless you're writing an application that needs to generate lots of random numbers, like cryptography. But that is a small minority of users, and those smart enough to be writing crypto properly are also smart enough to benchmark it properly on their hardware.