No. Oscilloscope + cheap = no.
I have ignored everyone telling me to spend money on the OSC and don't buy cheap.
I have ignored them 3 times and bought 3 scopes. If I had of listened to them, waited, saved and bought a £500 scope, rather than 3 or 4 £100 scopes I still be better off.
Mistake one:
It's cheap, it says 50Mhz, if it does 25Mhz I'm fine. Reality: If it says 50Mhz and it's cheap, expect 5Mhz clear, 10Mhz barely usable and 20Mhz+ garbage.
Mistake two:
I only need to look at 1Mhz or 10Mhz I don't need RF non-sense! A 20Mhz scope is fine. Reality: Your very next project needs 24Mhz to look at a high speed SPI interface.
Even if you get that 20Mhz and it is 20Mhz... you will grow out of it. I now need to "see" 24mbit/s and 48mbit/s SPI communications. At the current leading edge of the maker space, TFT screens close to HD and mobile screens from 10 years ago are now common on a breadboard. ESP32s, STM32s are replacing Arduinos. SPI and I2C coms on our breadboards are no longer running at 500Khz or 1MBit, but 25 or 50Mbit.... or higher. 20Mhz is useless.
The last scope I bought, after giving up electronics and wanting to get back in and not doing research first... was 100Mhz. Yeapook. ADS1014D,. "100Mhz". Nope. It will do WS2812 1MHz perfectly. 3Mbit/s SPI fine.. Give it 24MBit/s SPI and it shows glitching offset sine waves and it's triggers and trace positions are messed up with DC offset, phase and attenuation. Not to mention rendering artefacts due to software bugs.
If you are really new, just don't buy a scope.... or don't spent more than £50 on a "play" scope.
When you aren't "really new" and want to know why certain projects don't work, LISTEN TO WHAT THEY SAY! Don't go a little higher in ££. Go for the base, entry level, scope that has been reviewed, tested and does what you need now and what you will probably need soon. It will save you time and money in the long run.
So even thought I bought a "This will work fine" scope a few months back.... I STILL need to buy a £500 rigol to debug my current project.
Spend the $50 on the "toy scope", play with it, sure.
Realise the limitations and the problems with those devices.... then save money and wait... save.... wait for a sale/bargain and buy that Rigol or Keysight (etc) entry level scope which claims to be 100Mhz for £500, which will do far, far better than that £250 AliExpress 0.5GHz scope ... in the real word... measuring even 96MHz signals.