The densest subgraph of a large graph usually refers to some subgraph with the highest average degree, which has been extended to the family of $p$-means dense subgraph objectives by~\citet{veldt2021generalized}. The $p$-mean densest subgraph problem seeks a subgraph with the highest average $p$-th-power degree, whereas the standard densest subgraph problem seeks a subgraph with a simple highest average degree. It was shown that the standard peeling algorithm can perform arbitrarily poorly on generalized objective when $p>1$ but uncertain when $0<p<1$. In this paper, we are the first to show that a standard peeling algorithm can still yield $2^{1/p}$-approximation for the case $0<p < 1$. (Veldt 2021) proposed a new generalized peeling algorithm (GENPEEL), which for $p \geq 1$ has an approximation guarantee ratio $(p+1)^{1/p}$, and time complexity $O(mn)$, where $m$ and $n$ denote the number of edges and nodes in graph respectively. In terms of algorithmic contributions, we propose a new and faster generalized peeling algorithm (called GENPEEL++ in this paper), which for $p \in [1, +\infty)$ has an approximation guarantee ratio $(2(p+1))^{1/p}$, and time complexity $O(m(\log n))$, where $m$ and $n$ denote the number of edges and nodes in graph, respectively. This approximation ratio converges to 1 as $p \rightarrow \infty$.