i love all 3 of them, despite having them all ranked in the bottom half of kanye's discography (and 808s is a 10/10, so it's an amazing discography). they're all so different, that i'll just describe each of them.
late registration - pretty accessible sorta-conscious rap, i find it an inferior continuation of his debut album "the college dropout"'s sound. it's kanye's only album without ANY overarching lyrical theme, but the songs are all good. jon brion produced a lot of "late registration," adding in plenty of lush orchestral elements. strong 8/10, one of kanye's "worst" albums but that's like trying to rank beatles albums, they're all at least very very good.
808s and heartbreak - kanye goes full autocroon pop singer, to the point where publications at the time referred to him as "rapper-turned-r&b singer." recorded following his mother's death plus a pretty intense breakup, kanye sings the entire record thru autotune, backed by 80s-esque instrumentals. every rap and r&b thing on the charts that has autotune was most likely directly influenced by this album. there's no lyrical narrative here but all of the songs have a similar theme. 10/10 album, the vinyl packaging is excellent (includes 2 posters/inserts and a CD).
jesus is king - it's very good of course. kanye's born again christian phase won't click immediately for everyone but will eventually be regarded as a classic. there's a narrative here but it's a fairly shallow one. 9/10.
my favorite kanye album is "yeezus," which only officially exists on CD and cassette. however, it's one of his most detailed narratives and his most abrasive, challenging sonic construction. my kanye album ranking is as follows:
yeezus>the life of pablo>my beautiful dark twisted fantasy>kids see ghosts=ye>the college dropout>808s and heartbreak>jesus is king>late registration>watch the throne=graduation
the first 3 listed above are 11/10 ("the life of pablo" is only streaming, unfortunately), then KSG through 808s is 10/10. the rest are 8-9. kanye's like david bowie, the beatles, and bob dylan in the sense that he's too stylistically diverse for anyone to near-unanimously agree on any particular "best" album. "yeezus" and "MBDTF" are his most highly/consistently acclaimed, but the others all have plenty of supporters/defenders.