-ejeffrey: I see that you recommend more channels than band. I don't know if in my simple repairs is better 2 channel but 200mhz, or only 100mhz but 4 channel; I don't make circuits, I only repair faults. now I only use the multimeter, but I would love to find faults even using an oscilloscope.
I would consider the Rigol DS1000Z for four channels, Siglent 1202X-E for two.
So. Are you debugging digital stuff like SPI buses? If the answer is no, you don't need four channels.
I own both the Rigol and the Siglent and I think the Siglent is a better value for money unless you need four channels. Single price, no options, nothing to hack, 200 MHz, and it works pretty well.
For analog signals the Siglent 1202X-E has an important edge: the persistence modes are better implemented than on the Rigol DS1000Z. I have used mine, for example, to adjust the transmission envelope of a radio transceiver, one of the applications that some nostalgics think is better achieved with an analog scope.
I wouldn't get the cheaper Rigol DS1000E series, too old. Both Rigol and Siglent have made important improvements during the last two years.
A plus for Siglent (I also own one of their spectrum analyzers) they are learning to listen to their customers, something very unusual for Chinese companies. So they have been making important improvements in firmware updates.
I think these models (and unless you need four channels I insist, the sweet spot is the Siglent SDS1202X-E) offer a big value for money and they have capabilities you wouldn't have dreamed of a few years ago.