That seems reasonable, in the broad scheme of things.
It's always a question of need. Do you need a precision supply that's rock steady at all voltages and frequencies? Probably not, because the frequency requirement will be blown by the inductance of half a meter of hookup cables.
A good baseline is, will it work for logic supplies? Meaning, can it do 5.0V or 3.3V +/-5%? Holding that tolerance even under transient conditions? Sounds like it can, or it could with some modest additional filtering.
Speaking of which -- do check to make sure it's stable with a capacitive load, or an LC load. Resistors (or current sinks) are boring!
I have a bench supply that's built with large darlington transistors, and no active current limit; at the end of a 2m cable, I measured over 40A peak current capacity, before the test pulsing circuit terminated the pulse. It takes some 20us for the current to rise to that point. During which time, the load voltage is 100% less than nominal!
Clearly, such use is only practical with bypass capacitors at the point of load, and that's true, by necessity, no matter what's inside the power supply. So, don't worry too much about extreme bandwidth or stability. If anything, take the opportunity to reduce bandwidth or increase loop gain, to achieve lower noise or greater DC stability.
Tim