The starter kit is great value for money. To demonstrate, a Dominaria United Set Booster costs £5.99, 5 of those are £25.97 (the price of two 2 booster sets plus one single booster), so you get 5 booster packs worth of cards for £18.52 less than what you'd usually get plus an extra 6 cards for good measure. For the non-lands, you get about 56 commons and 10 rares, with two of the rares being foils. For the lands, you get 54 lands total, 8 being multi colour lands (very useful) and 46 being regular colour lands (all the lands are common). All of this is divided between two decks, one red green and another white blue. The starter kit also comes with two codes that each unlock both decks from the kit in MTG: Arena. You can use one of the codes to get the decks and give the second one to your friend so both of you can play both decks in the game. Now for the not so good parts of this product. This product was released in 2022, but it was released on the 3rd of June, so any magic set released after that time, Commander Legends: Battle For Baldur's Gate, Double Masters 2022, and Dominaria United so far, won't be in the kit. A more noticeable flaw is how the play guide in the kit doesn't teach you as much as it should. While it does teach you a good amount of basics and keywords, I was surprised that there was no mention of summoning sickness or how creatures restore their defence at the end of the combat phase since both of those are quite important basics to know of when playing magic. Additionally, the guide didn't even touch on the stack or the turn phases, which, while not exactly basic knowledge, are very useful to know for beginners and intermediate players alike. Even with the basics it does cover it doesn't explain them in detail, which might not seem necessary, and yet, my Mum, who I've introduced mtg to, still feels confused by the mechanics, despite playing just fine, which might not have happened if the guide went in more detail on what you can and can't do in magic. To counter the guide not explaining all the rules I'd recommend starting MTG: Arena alongside buying the starter kit (if you're playing by yourself) or having someone who knows magic play with you (what I did for me Mum). Besides, you get a free code for the decks in MTG: Arena so you're incentivised to play Arena anyway. Overall this was a great product (if I don't have any other decks I'll play the starter decks I got with a local mtg group) and was 100% worth the money. I just wish it could've been a little better