My current go-to budget AWG is Rigol's DG811 after it's "liberated". In the class below that, this Uni-T appears to be the most decent choice but I haven't got first-hand experience with it so I haven't got a real comparison.
What I like about it is that it seems to be solidly built (I simply don't like gear that's got a flimsy, cheapish appearance), uses "real" DACs (none of the directly FPGA-driven, discrete R-2R networks of questionable accuracy), its design with a single, low voltage supply (so it can easily be powered by a USB power box), the presence of a numeric keapad (thoug it may be tiny), and it's general small, compact design that makes it a good choice as an "on-the-road" instrument.
I don't like too much the absence of dedicated sample memory, the apparent lack of decent PC software support (other instruments, even much more expensive ones, may not look much better here...), the way the transconductance amplifier is located directly after the DAC and not with the reconstruction filter in between (this opened Uni-T the chance to go with a single-ended reconstruction filter design and safe a few components at the cost of higher distortion), that it only has one AUX port for all "advanced functions" and it lacks a reference frequency input - that's probably the price one has to pay for the form factor and may be acceptable considering its main applications (there are "almost-high-end" instruments available that aren't equipped that much better...yes, Siglent, I'm talking about you
), and maybe that Uni-T lost the opportunity to include a battery option within the instrument's casing.
Edit: During a quick fly-over of the manual, I noticed that the multi-function AUX input/output of the UTG9x2 has just digital capabilities. This means, no external analog modulation is available. This is really disappointing news. It excludes the use of the AWG as a wide-range VCO!
I'ld love to do a comparison of one of these Uni-T AWG vs. an entry level instrument a class above it (for axample the Rigol device that I mentioned), we may actually be up to a surprise (in either direction...) but I just can't be bothered to spend on another AWG that I won't really need
.
Anyway, if one is in the market for hobby grade AWG, and the available funds are hard-limited to round about 100 US, EU or UK bucks, this Uni-T device probably won't be the worst choice.