Every single good seatpost QR clamp has a tightness adjustment you can make with a torque wrench. I used to have a slipping seatpost on my Brompton when I bought it and weighed 110 kg.
Do this: clamp the QR tight, set the torque using a torque wrench to the correct value with the QR clamped. Once you have done this, you will note the QR lever is much firmer, requiring a lot of force to tighten the seatpost. Yet it should be possible to tighten it without superhuman force.
What is the correct torque, then? Depends on the seatpost clamp and the bolt size. On Bromptons it's 4-7 Nm, and I put it to 7 Nm to stop the slipping seatpost. At the factory, it was set to 4 Nm which was definitely too loose for a 110 kg person.
On this Brompton, the bolt is a M6 bolt. Usually M6 seatpost collar bolts are tightened to around 9 Nm so I suspect the Brompton could take even more torque on that bolt.
Using Futek bolt torque calculator, selecting metric, 6mm and custom material with 640 Nm proof strength (corresponding to 8.8 grade bolt which is probably the most common bolt grade you see on bikes), and mating thread as 9mm 6061T6 aluminum, it gives 9 Nm recommended torque.
If your bolt is M5, put it to 5 Nm (determine bolt size by using a vernier caliper). While this may sound too little if M6 can take 9 Nm torque, consider this: bolt torque does not hold the seatpost still, bolt tension does. And torque is proportional to tension and bolt size. So 9 Nm M6 bolt is the same tension as 5/6*9 Nm = 7.5 Nm M5 bolt. So 5 Nm is only 33% less tension than the tension in the M6 bolt.
Also if you find M5 bolt inadequate and your clamp has a M5 bolt, maybe you could find somewhere a QR clamp with M6 bolt. Just make sure the clamp diameter is the correct one for your frame.
I find that I can adjust the seat height on my Brompton by eye without any markings and get the seat straight enough not to bother me and at height near enough the correct one so the height error doesn't bother me either, without the seatpost height collar (which would prevent raising it above the set height, easily allowing setting one height for one rider only). Of course Bromptons are for short distances, if riding long distances then correct seat height is very important.
You may consider buying a seatpost with etched markings on it. Some seatposts have a marking scale on the side. If you can find a seatpost with a marking scale, long enough length, correct diameter then consider other properties of a good quality seatpost: the saddle should remain on the seatpost even if one bolt fails, so the saddle attachment should be a two-bolt attachment made in a way that one bolt failure does not cause your ass to drop on the spinning rear wheel.
Usually I recommend seatposts that are polished aluminum since they are less likely to fail due to fatigue than anodized aluminum. However, if the seatpost is slipping such as due to using a QR clamp, it may be useful to consider black anodized aluminum as it has a rougher surface. Yet that might not be necessary: my Brompton seat slips no more after torquing the bolt to the correct torque, and there the seatpost is polished aluminum.