Before accepting that "Bromantane and ALCAR are the best" I would need to know this were true, i.e. we rule out the possibility that there are no better options.
But correcting dopamine is a hotly debated issue, asking a variety of practitioners would result in a variety of answers. Depending with whom you consult, you could end up with a wildly different set of solutions.
ALCAR afaik only corrects the age-related dopamine decline, which affects risk taking and reward, and you can read more about here[1] and here[2]. For someone under 40 it likely has little to no benefit.
ALCAR doesn't always reduce anxiety, in fact it often makes it worse. There is little to no indication of dosing in your post, and this is a potentially important matter to resolve before advocating use.
Upgregulating TH is also a double-edged sword. Lots of things in that boat.. epidemii[3], CBD, Nobiletin (from citrus). However, many have reports of tolerance and none has emerged as an effective ADHD or addiction treatment option. I would need to know the reason bromantane is an exception to this, or if there are any other secondary mechanisms which could contribute to an exemplary effect.
There are other options to consider as well.
Any partial agonist at D2 will have some benefit in displacing the more potent dopamine and therefore in boosting receptor levels and baseline activity, probably the foremost today is CBD[4]. Such partial agonists have shown benefits in treating addiction, schizophrenia and anxiety. ADHD-specific studies are lacking.
Phenylalanine can be supplemented modestly at 500-1000 mg daily, between meals. It's an essential amino acid and a precursor, being converted first to tyrosine and finally dopamine (similar to tryptophan -> 5-HTP -> serotonin).
Ginkgo has shown pretty consistent effects with increasing dopamine and acetylcholine in the prefrontal cortex, an area commonly associated with working memory, executive control and ADHD-dysfunction. Taking it has also shown some effectiveness in treating childhood ADHD & schizophrenia, disorders commonly associated with dopamine and glutamate dysfunction.
Exercise, meditation, partaking of an ongoing education, and cultivating an active social life— many things are sure to enhance one's appreciation and satisfaction with life, and to help achieve a more normal state of being.
The preoccupation to think in purely pharmacologic terms often distracts from the inquiry as a whole, and unfairly simplifies life factors and expectations of effect which may have a powerful and mysterious influence all their own. I've learned not to take my experiments too seriously; to be patient and discerning; not to rush conclusions, and not to neglect external factors (or my own biases) in the analysis.