Some damned good advice above. Presses are something people make a big deal out of. Where the differences can come out, is down the road in things like sizing bullets, forming cases, tasks that take a lot of power, that's where the steel vs aluminum frame argument starts from. There are some differences in the way the linkages are done, some may wear faster and result in some slack which can show up in case sizing or bullet seating, but, it takes a lot of abuse and poor caretaking to accomplish that.
The place where you wind up spending the loot, is on the accessories, a trimmer, priming tools, sizing tools for different methods of doing things, powder handling tools such as throwers or scales.
You can spend extra up front getting good tools that save you a pile of time and labour, and yet, as much as some of the cheap stuff that can accomplish that also, some of it can just frustrate you, and all the mfgrs have some quirky items in their lines. You can see lots of reviews or forum comments from brand ho's and haters. Some of the things people accept about some quirks of tools don't show until you try one out and use it for a while, or they never tried anything out of the mainstream stuff, and can be irritating once you discover them.
Some examples can be handpriming tools, trimmers, presses, that have universal jaw setups. If you never stray from the ordinary common commercial rounds, probably won't have an issue, but... Some won't accept some cartridges due to rim size or thickness, some are awkward to use when inserting or extracting a case. They have their limitations.
Some "time saving " adaptors for dies cost money for each cartridge, and may not stay tight after insertion into a press, you may be better off with a turret press, but, also have to buy spare turrets for different cartridges, and store them.
Some trimmers may not be entirely friendly to a primed case, some take a bit of a rigamarole to set up when changing cartridges.
And, no reloading kit gives you everything you need, some of them are come with questionable scales, items that you may or may not want.
A comparator to check case sizing and base to ogive lengths and a dry lube neck brush kit will save you a lot of grief and effort in sizing cases.