I don't have one of these (
here's a link to it for everyone), but looking at the pictures I'd say it's quite reasonable - the a-frame isn't 25mm square tube for a start, this thing is at least serious about off-road. The stone guard is nice, thinking about one for my van.
You'll have to fit a brake controller to your car to tow it, although the photos appear to show the older "override" brake setup on the hitch.
The 70L water tank is a bonus, you'll love that.
The dual battery system is optional, I'd ask if they wire up for it even if you don't choose that option. If the wiring is installed anyway, you might find it a lot cheaper to do the rest yourself (because they're not mentioning pricing, it's probably steep). Rays Outdoors now sell C-Tek chargers (you simply can't buy better, my opinion) and if you're a member you get a discount.
Two things are important: the bed looks like a thin bit of sponge. You might want to get yourself either a single queen air bed or two doubles and mount them together (stops one person bouncing the other around during the night). The other thing is although they advertise a 45 second setup, these things rarely are - especially if you've loaded the roof up with gear as well.
Woody and Bosshog have this sort of thing. Woody's rig took about 2 hours to fully set up and Bosshog's wasn't far behind. The issue isn't the tent itself, but all the other bits of stuff that you either have to detach before you can unfold the thing, or that you have to unpack and install once you've unfolded - for example in this one, getting out and inflating the air mattress(es).
The only true "fast setup" is a full-sized van and they're generally expensive. We'll pull over on the side of the road (like we did at the Gungal Rest Area on the way home) and make a sandwich, sit down and enjoy it and then move on with zero setup time. We'll sometimes camp overnight the same way - just move the entire rig so the van is MOSTLY level and then lock it up and go to sleep. Perfect for travelling.
Still, it's much better than a tent. I'd make sure you take along some canvas water sealant and before you go anywhere you give the seams a spray. There might be some advantage in packing some poles, ropes and pegs and a bloody big tarp to put over the whole thing, too. It adds to the setup time, but will protect everything better in a downpour.
Anyway, for the $ it looks good. At least it's not one of those piddly framed things that threaten to break the first time you tow it somewhere.