It is like anything else I guess and depends on your requirements. Mine is a tool to do a job and in that respect I really don't know how you'd make it any better. Yes they are expensive for what you seem to get but they are well engineered and practical and the longer I live with mine (approaching 12 years now at a guess) the more I come to like it for all these reasons, good design and engineering don't come cheap. Some people like to fiddle and customize and chop and change whereas I just like to lift the rifle out and go and not have to think about it. It will shoot any ammo I can put into it better than I can, it has been weatherproof and reliable in some pretty awful conditions, it is completely consistent unlike me, the cocking mechanism is certainly a very good idea, and best of all it comes apart and packs into something little bigger than a briefcase and when you put it back together nothing has changed. In a way a lot of these things are disadvantages for people as it is a quality tool for someone looking to do a job but if your hobby is guns rather than getting out and using them then there is nothing to modify, fiddle with, worry about and load development can be as simple as buying a box of whatever the shop has in the right cartridge. A lot of people get a lot of pleasure out of enjoying their guns, modifying them etc. and in that case I'd say the Blaser isn't what they want.