My wife and I have the Bay model of these. The Inlet, while cheaper, can't be used for much in the way of serious excursions, and feels pretty tacky, like how a $150 wal-mart boat might, but more flimsy, and also $800.
However, we really like the Bay model, and have taken them on overnight trips, stuffing our gear in the bulkheads. We like how the overall dynamics kind of hit a goldilocks zone between casual flat water and serious touring kayaks.
I'll address a few key points.
1. The durability. Everyone wants to know if the coruplast holds up to rocks, etc. We've dragged these out on rocky beaches, hit hidden logs, etc, no problem. There are YouTube shills throwing them off buildings and hitting them with hammers, just fine. The problem is not the folding coruplast body - that is almost indestructible - the problem is the dozens of other little plastic parts, straps, buckles, etc, which can easily break and totally fuck over your boat, usually when you're putting it together, which can actually take a bit of strength and forcing various things. Luckily most of these parts can be replaced or DIYed, but seriously - everyone focuses on the wrong thing. The hull is durable AF. It's all the other shit holding the hull together that sucks. Also Oru's QC is not great. One of the boats we ordered literally did not have one of the straps riveted in, so I had to DIY. They say the boat is rated to "20,000 folds", but some other little plastic thing will assuredly break long before any crease cracks due to folding.
2. They are not really super easy to setup. They aren't super hard either, but I would say overall level-of-effort / hassle-factor wise, they're basically a tie with a regular boat on a roof rack or trailer. You aren't really ahead, it's just different trade offs.
3. People are so annoying about them. Every fucking time you set it up you will have some stranger asking about it, asking the same fucking questions like "is it durable, how much does it cost," etc.