Option 1 is a bit whatever but could still be very interesting depending on the scenario and the exact nature of the power.
Option 2 has been done to death (at least in my experience). Especially, in the fantasy genre and the "I've gone back in time to a world where blank no longer exists and I can now be the pioneer of blank"-genre. But it could also be good depending on how you have the MC use the knowledge/experience. (Though I will say I've found it frustrating when a story starts with this premise and then the author goes, 'because things have changed protagonist-kun will be doing things afresh with barely any reliance/use/utilization of the prior knowledge and experience that the story spent dozens of chapters making a huge deal out of!')
Option 3 could also be pretty interesting due to the inherit limits of most books, and I haven't seen this premise too often. A scenario where the MC doesn't actually have first hand future knowledge but him from the future is sorta/kinda guiding him
Honestly, my only real advice would be to have fun with it. I personally feel that it'd be fine to do whatever, because I've found that the secret to writing fresh stories isn't putting new spins on old concepts, or trying to reinvent the wheel. My favorite stories haven't been the ones that were especially ground breaking, or overly innovative, I've actually often hated some of those...It's the stories whose writers were able to breath new life into a genre even when using old tropes that have stuck with me the most.