I wanted to build a Bubito, and the kit they had was out of stock. So, I bought this bundle instead and tried to find all the other parts individually. This kit was good, and the build was fine except for some clearance issues. The first thing I noticed was that the BubbyFPV motors that came with this product did not reach through the 3D printed skids far enough to thread into the motors. The skids were too thick and would block the **** from making it through the carbon fiber arm. I was able to make a design that had thinner skids with my 3D printer in order to solve this. When picking the parts for the Bubito, the AIO was hard to find. The exact model that most people use for this build is not available on the Rotor Riot store. I emailed Rotor Riot, and asked them for the exact model of AIO they use for the Bubito and where I could find it. Instead of this, I got a reply informing me on the availability of the Bubito camera, and no mention of an AIO. After finding an AIO that would work with this kit, I build the quad and had some issues. The 35mm props would slightly hit the plastic motor plugs on the AIO, as well as slightly grazing the 3D printed camera mount that comes with the frame kit. I would recommend taking these plugs out and soldering the motors, or sanding the props down. Overall, this kit is still very fun to build and fly. The parts recommended do work properly with some minor clearance issues that can be solved. I would not suggest building a Bubito if you do not have a 3D printer that you can prototype solutions with, or a way to solve the problems that occurred in this build. The main issue was the slight difference in AIO's, between the one used in the prebuilt Bubito, and the one linked on the Rotor Riot store. The drone is still very well put together in terms of the build quality, and the way that all the parts can fit with eachother.