I have some MSR kit: -
Hubba Hubba tent
Reactor stove system
Whisperlite International stove
Dragonfly stove
Fuel bottles - various sizes
Trillium stove base
Annual maintenance kits
Piezo igniter
Alpine Stowaway pot
Alpine dish brush/scraper
MugMate coffee filter
Overall the quality is excellent. MSR often try to attract the weight weenies though. I would rather have a bit more weight as long as the robustness increases proportionately.
The tent is about the only thing that I have bought that I am unhappy with, but had I have done some more research and not been such a tightwad I would have looked closer at Hilleberg. The Hubba Hubba is freestanding, which is great for using indoors when you want some privacy. It goes up inner first, which I hate, as the inner with that lovely bath tub floor can collect quite a lot of rain whilst I faff about trying to get that up then the outer on top. MSR should supply each of these tents with an MSR Sponge (TM).
I like the pump on the liquid fuel MSR stoves as you can pump the stove with a sensible number of pumps, unlike my Soto which asks for 300 strokes of the pump, then the lighting procedure means that most of the effort is lost. If I was going to use a liquid fuel stove I would use either: -
Optimus Polaris or
Optimus 8R or
Coleman Sportster
The Polaris packs away smaller than most liquid fuel stoves AND it has one nozzle that can handle different types of fuel. The 8R is just a lovely little stove and it took me a long time to find one. I have got a similar, but larger one, maybe a 111(?), and if I were a member of the car owning community I would use that instead. I haven't used the Sportster yet, but it would be useful on the motorbike as I could syphon fuel from the bike's tank to run the stove on.