Folks, remember that Suma wrote that he’s eleven, so this is about wise use of pocket money

SumaW wrote:I'm poor and I can't get a set over $40.
I empathize, been there, as probably most of us, at times.
Looks
quite nice to me, much better than the cardboard sets I began to play with

tchan001 wrote:Just enjoy the game with your new set. You can become great at the game regardless of the value of your equipment.
What Tchan001 says!
I have a few sets meanwhile (because the local Go playing evening is at my place and because I teach Go to kids at the local school
even though I’m just 15-13 kyu but there are no stronger players in a perimeter of perhaps 22 kilometres) …
… but, as noted elsewhere here:
as soon as the game begins, the playing gear vanishes into the background, there are only the lines and the black and white pieces, which all are “just”
symbols.
To paraphrase loosely from the Tao Te Ching:
~ The denotation is not the denotate. (the word we use for a “thing” is not the thing itself.)
~ The map is not the territory. (Alfred Korzybski)
~ The picture of [X] is not [X].

René Magritte, “this is not a pipe”
So … even when I play on that old Katsura goban and with those shell & slate stones that are so precious to my ego, they vanish when the game begins and
it’s just the grid and the black and white pieces.
(And it’s not even these the game is about, I think, and it’s not even the representation of the grid and black and white pieces in our minds, but what the representation in our minds stand for … the world, and life.)
I’d say … great set, get it.
But to be honest, I’d also recommend to get a cheap reversible 13x13/9x9 board together with this because (in my experience) it’s quite hard to teach beginners on 19x19 (assuming that you’ll have to teach others in order to have other players around). But that could possibly be made from a piece of plywood and with felt markers.
Good luck and lots of fun!
Tom