I have had a Marshall MV50 for years and, these days, it never gets used. It is just way too loud for home use. I also have a rack with a Marshall JMP 1 valve preamp. This gets over the "too loud" issue but, by the time you add external speakers, power amp and the inevitable rack effects it is bulky and inconvenient to move.
The Bugera (or "Bug", as it has been christened) is completely different. It is deceptively small and light and will happily sit on a table or desk.
I was after an amp I could just grab, plug into, and play where ever I am in the house or elsewhere. This fits the bill superbly. The controls are ridiculously simple but hit the tone I am looking for. Other set ups have rows of knobs and switches but seldom seem to nail the sound I want, and I just give up looking.
This is billed as a vintage amp and the description fits it well. Great Blues tones with a Strat, but if you are in to shredding look elsewhere.
It has wonderful warm, creamy tones that seem to cascade honey over your ear parts. The reverb adds depth without being intrusive, and the tone rolls off the highs very nicely. The gain drive is perhaps a little less than I might have hoped , but I have only used it at the 0.1 Watt setting with volume around 2 or 3, so probably unfair to be definitive.
Naked, with just a Strat, it achieves great "Wind Cries Mary" and "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" type driven sounds, which are probably grittier than they may seem due to my lack of volume. It, none the less, has ample valve compression and dynamics - the whole reason we buy a valve amp. It does "cleans" without getting too thin and jangley. And you would swear it had bigger than its 8" speaker.
It is probably best naked and, as a result, seems to flatter a level of playing which can cope without hiding behind a barrage of effects. Indeed, it doesn't seem to like effects. I tried it with a Mooer Blues Crab which seemed to do little but make it sound a bit crabby. Even just using a looper can give a muddy, undefined "Wall of Sound" feel.
So, if you are hankering after the old time "man (or woman) an amp and a guitar" - plug in and play where ever, jump on a freight train with a bottle of JD and a scabby dog for company, or pull up a rocking chair on the porch and let the music cascade over you... this is the best value for money you can get.
If anything the amps only fault is it is too cheap. If it were stupidly expensive it would be revered as a connoisseurs boutique amp. It will flatter skill, technique and feel but would not do a novice any favours at all.