I came into an inheritance and would like to get a good scope. So yeah, go ahead and dream as big as you want. I will be using this thread to base my purchasing decision on. So if you were to start fresh, what would you have liked to get?
Snarky answer: Imagine if this were a musicians' forum, or maybe a customer forum for a music retailer. Someone shows up and asks, "I'm interested in learning to play the guitar. I have a budget of $30,000, which should certainly be enough for a killer axe. What do you guys recommend?" What responses would he or she be likely to receive from experienced musicians?
Realistic answer: At the $30,000-and-up level you'll find a lot of specialized instruments that are great at specialized tasks, but not very good general-purpose instruments. They may have fast ADCs and massive acquisition memories that are sluggish to work with. Little or no attention may be paid to user experience and UI design, having been devoted to performance instead. Common general-purposes tasks like bus decoding will be no better-implemented than they are in much cheaper instruments, assuming they're present at all. And they are less likely to have standard 1-megohm inputs, which means that specialized active probes will be needed for common tasks. Using such a scope as a daily driver will be an exercise in frustration.
Finally, if you have questions, fewer people here and elsewhere will be able to help with them.
You can spend a million dollars on a 100 GHz+ oscilloscope if you want... so what's stopping you from doing that? Whatever that reason may be, it almost certainly applies at the $30,000 level as well. The amount of money in question can be put to
far better use in your lab. It only makes sense to spend this much on a scope if you have a specific need for what it can do.