Honestly, I'm very impressed that they've gotten this far with it. I was sort of expecting that after six months they'd go "ah, we really should have charged about five times as much for this. The money's gone, a few barely-functional printers will be delivered to the first backers, and everyone else gets nothing" (based on past experiences with another "ultra-cheap" crowdfunded 3D printer project). Or, alternatively, it'd take so long that by the release date it'd be obsolete.

It's now looking unlikely that either of those will occur. Development seems to be proceeding well, there seems to be plenty of testing going on (so it's likely to actually work), and so far there don't seem to have been any money problems. The capabilities at the moment look pretty amazing by "cheap 3D printer" standards, especially considering that a "cheap 3D printer" still tends to be well over double the price of the Peachy. In many ways (maximum build area, ability to use flexible resins) it's highly impressive even by "horribly expensive 3D printer" standards.

It's a bit annoying to have to wait (I've got a growing list of projects waiting for a 3D printer) but at least we're waiting for something awesome - rather than waiting for a failure.