Cheap scopes are always a compromize between functions, speed, memory and of course analog performance.
What do you need?you know. Do you want to do digital stuff, communication like spi/i2c? You can decode on paper but that slows you down a lot.
You know that at some point you'll want to mess with stuff like CAN bus? Then you have to consider that.
Or, if you never have to look at >30Vsignals you can also consider a usb based scope, but nothing less than a picoscope. You'll lose all the physical controls but because you don't have to pay for those you can get a very powerful instrument for a fraction of the cost. It also support pretty much ANY commercial serial standard with no limitations in thresholds, baud rates and such. Guess what i keep on the pc area at work, or when i have to look inside car busses and such..
a 100-200€ picoscope where the next alternative would be a keysight or lecroy which starts at 3k€ plus the needed options.