"German made", "German made", "German made" (+ "swiss made" + "from Denmark").
Yes that scope seems to have some attractive points, and yes, "made in Germany" is one of them - but, pardon me, certainly not one of high value. I mean, it's not like Germany is the or at least one noteworthy scope-country.
What "German made" actually, realistically means boils down not to high-end know-how, but rather to "good quality" as in "well built" meaning "not carelessly slapped together but rather built in proper facilities and by (usually) well trained technicians and workers.
But wrt design and/or high-tech it says very little. Germans would built (as in "production") even a technically crappy scope with care and well that is, it might be crappy as scope but it would be sturdy and likely survive decades in a useful state.
BUT: That's very similar in quite a few other european countries, Switzerland being but one example.
At the end of the day build quality is just one factor. With a scope one should also ask/look at whether it's better than average in its class or maybe even exceptional and whether it offers, at a minimum, what's considered "normal" in its class or, ideally, even everything a potential buyer (or ideally even most potential buyers) want, need, expect.
And please, pretty please, don't bring up screen size again and again. That was, many years ago, when scopes usually/often wouldn't come with a VGA, DVI, [whatever] external monitor connector or with LAN port + http server or somesuch.
Nowadays, again kudos to Siglent (and a few others), I hardly care a about screen size because, if I really need a large screen occasionally '12" vs only 8"' isn't a good solution, 19" or even larger vs 8" is. Screen size nowadays largely is an everyday comfort question, not anymore a major factor. Meaning: I'd buy a really good and attractive scope with a "crappy" 6.5" screen (and a VGA connector) without hesitation, but I'd seriously hesitate to buy a scope that leaves me wanting but has a - wow! - 15.6" screen.
Reminds me of the now trendy DMM with a 4.x" display, touchy of course and loads of so, so (not) useful GUI stuff. Yes, sometimes it's useful, indeed, to see a "trend" plot (which I tend to call "snail scope view"), sure, but at the end of the day, just like the screen size trend, it's mainly one thing: a playground for marketing, or in other words, a way to create "needs" (which actually just are wants) in "the market" (translation: the buyer herd whose raison d'etre is to be milked).
So, sorry, in the lower end market segment max. 1.6 GS/s may be acceptable (and I fully agree. 100 or 200 MHz bandwidth is plenty or even more than enough for 90% of typical hobbyist use) - but the price is way to high.
So, let's ask the other relevant question: what do you expect for that quite high price tag? Is "made in Germany" really important enough to you to shell out that amount of money? Really? Or maybe "large screen size"?
I personally - and I accept and respect if your view is very different - think it's not attractive. For the 1 - 2 GS/s segment it's far too expensive and for the segment of its price class it's, pardon me, nice (as in "it looks nice") but far below what I expect for that kind of money.
What's the current price for a low-end R&S scope? I don't think it's higher than that of the Magnova - and it gives you "a german scope!" and a (kind of) large screen too.
Earth to Magnova fans "care to return to earth, feet on solid ground?"
A nice weekend to everyone