I agree:
mechanical tools such as cramps, clamps, vices, prybars, hammers and so on are reasonably quantifiable by eye and the "feel" of them,
Edged cutters are always in the budget bracket and should not be expected to go beyond that one job it was bought for, or as a contingency for cutter you use a lot of and need an emergency one of.
There is a place in the market for this stuff. Its up to us the sort the whet from the chaff.....
Lets face it if you need a 25MM SDS masonary bit for one job that will probably never be repeated, and SDS drills are not part of your usual toolkit, what do you buy? Macrist? Write a letter to the SDS Advisory Board? call Festool for advice? or buy a Silverline.... Simple. Cost effective. Available. and after all that you will probaly be amazed at how well it worked and keep it in your toolbox, just in case..............
As Neilyweely said, common sense tells you whats a bargain and whats not, and there is good value for the discerning buyer.
As for the electrical offerings , they are poor. even though they always put a spare pair of brushes in, a tape measure, a spirit level, goggles, etc in some, it cannot make up for the lack of fitness for purpose. If these tools were human, they would be anarchistic sociopathic vandals with suicidal tendencies and a lacklustre libido..........and unavailable for work.
To recap:
There is nowt wrong with the cramps.
There is no good reason to buy the electrical offerings.
The edged tools are good for one off or infrequent light use but not a long term investment with any regrind costs etc outweighing in most cases the initial cost, but a decent entry level offering.
In summary:
I think we should cover Einhell and Marksman, Nu-tool and Blackspur brands as well while we are at it, the good value/ poor value, reference table.
Its easy to sing loud praise of a £600 quid electric screwdriver/ drill with a high value brand name, but hard to let people know of the pleasant surprise from a one off buy that was not only fit for purpose but low cost as well.