Residential drafter trying to select new cad software

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So I recently got hired at a residential construction company/custom cabinet shop. It is a buddies business and he has big dreams for his companies. We currently are using autocad 2012 lt, and just doing all the drafting with it. In the next few months we will be opening up a new office, and in the office we will have a showroom for our clients, including an area with a big 80" tv along with 4 other 32" tvs that we can show people their house on before it is built. We want to be able to pull up say, the house on one screen, pull up the cabinets on another. Maybe pictures of another house that they really liked the look of on another screen, etc. We would love to be able to go on a 3d photorealistic (or as close as we can get) walkthrough of the house. So that we can show our clients what they are getting and sell them on additional features that they were iffy on to start with.
Our problem is, we don't know which software to switch to. We really would like to avoid spending 20 grand on 3 design suites for the 2 drafters and main "display" computer. So first question is if we were to buy 2 copies of revit lt (for the drafting) and then 1 copy of the suite (specifically for 3ds max and showroom) for the display computer, would we be able to make that work for what we want to do?
2nd question, Is the building design suite really the best option for us at this time? Will it give us better effects than some of the other softwares out there that are cheaper, like Sketchup, softplan, and a handful of others I've seen? I've also heard some talk about people using Unreal Engine 4 for some home renderings recently since it is now free. Anybody with any experience in that?
3rd and probably most important question. Just how long is it going to take us to learn this stuff? And any suggestions on learning it? We only have a very basic understanding of Autocad LT at this point. The little that I've played around with Revit LT it feels like its going to be quite a large learning curve to truly understand well. And then when it comes to learning 3dsMax and the programs you need to successfully create a photo quality rendering we are pretty intimidated. Once we do learn these programs pretty well, just how long is it going to take us to turn our normal revit drawing, into something like the picture I attached? Because the ability to do that, is the reason we have decided that 3dsMax and revit are probably the way to go.
Sorry for the long post, but appreciate any help you can give me. Have a great day 🙂
Jeremy