I bought one of these based on Daves review and for what I use it for (pinball machines), it's fine. The one thing that sold me on it (and this will seem faintly ridiculous) was the fast continuity response which is great. The screen is big and bright enough for it to sit in the corner of a pinball machine cabinet and still be easily read, although I haven't really used the scope functionality on it other than using it to check the output of some PIAs. The only gripes I have are mostly the same as everybody else, the useless bar graph and it not remembering what mode you were in.
I didn't see this video at all until today, but coincidentally I got the ZT-702S model back in July and find it to be quite useful due to the same qualities you pointed out (with the same gripes as well). Also, the form factor, size and above average mechanical robustness are aspects that help me take it to the field more often.
When I got it, I put it in my toolbox for a roadtrip just for fun but not really considering it would be put to much use. We ended up having to make some things work on an el-cheapo car inverter and it proved quite useful to see if the 120V
AC "modified sinewave" was still good enough to power some of the more sensitive things tied to its output. Back from the trip I saw myself taking this unit to the field more often than my regular DMMs simply due to the practicality of having a "waveform observator" feature that gives extra insights to see noisy or failing DC power rails and follow audio paths.
Overall, a great surprise