For the average user who brings the router home, plugs it into a wall socket, just sets a name on the wifi network and a password, it is a good choice for the money. However, more advanced users will have a problem. For example, in AP mode, Android devices have trouble working over wifi. In router mode they work normally and everything runs fine, but in AP mode it doesn't work for some reason. Other devices like Windows, macOS or iOS don't have this problem. At home, I tested it on 5 Android devices in different versions and different manufacturers and the problem was identical on all of them. The manufacturer knows about it, but apparently hasn't addressed it yet. Even if you set up a guest wifi network for guests with limited access so that the devices can't see each other, they can still see each other and communicate with each other. The guest network is thus meaningless. This restriction does not work even if you set it for a traditional network. The only limitation is that you can't get from the guest network to the router, but even that can be worked around. Overall, there are also quite a few settings options and those that are, some don't even work. OpenWrt has official support and is easy to upload, which is great. However, it requires more advanced knowledge and more time for setup and customization. After installation, in addition to setting up the ports and wifi, you need to set up the router to use both CPU cores, install packages depending on the services you want to use, etc. Personally, I've already spent a few days on it, made countless adjustments and I still can't figure out why I have a weaker wifi range with OpenWrt than with the native firmware. Nothing less the possibility to really separate the network for guests even in AP mode and the possibility to use the WAN port as a LAN and thus have one more port to use is nice. I bought the router on sale for under 800 CZK, which motivated me to replace my 10 year old router, because for that money CUDY AX3000 (WR3000) had no competition. If you have a medium-sized apartment/smaller house, the router is sufficient and can be a good choice for undemanding users. If you have a larger apartment/house or are a more demanding user, I would recommend to pay a hundred more and buy the WR3000S model. It has more ports, more storage and stronger wifi.