When I first got into reloading between 15 & 20 years ago, I bought an RCBS Rock Chucker, RCBS dies, etc. I went into a good-sized store (not a chain; locally-owned) and asked them about reloading in general and specifically about equipment. They favored the lifetime warranty, good durability, etc., of RCBS, I wanted to buy Speer bullets and manual anyway on account of them being as close to local as I knew of at the time, so I bought. I hated it. There was no reason I needed a press that weighed 800 lbs for my reloading (.223 Rem & .44 Mag at the time), but mine did. I didn't have a permanent place to mount this super-heavy press nor a permanent place to reload. The case lube was/is a MAJOR PITA 'cause it's slow to apply and will destroy powder and primers. This was either all lost on those recommending stuff to me, or perhaps they just didn't/don't know any better, or perhaps I was too young to suppose that a business would recommend what they stocked and nothing else. The world wide web didn't exist in the way it does now, so there weren't resources like this website to ask people questions.
At about the same time, I bought a Lee hand press, dies, scale, and powder dipper set from MidwayUSA back when their pricing included freight to my door (NOBODY stocked Lee stuff locally except for some trimmer stuff). I won't claim the Lee hand press will last my entire family heritage throughout all time. OTOH, I didn't pay for that upfront like I did with the RCBS and I don't expect it. Regardless, the Lee stuff is what made me stick with reloading. I sold the Rock Chucker and RCBS dies nearly unused. I think I may have just thrown out the case lube & pad?
I later bought a Pro1000 progressive for pistol loading. I still have it, but it wants more attention and adjustment from me than I care to give so I really just don't use it. Not sure whether I'd get one again or not; depends upon how much pistol volume I shot? In terms of durability, one can now get cast steel (not cast iron like the others, cast steel; comes from old railroad rails, or at least it did) from Lee and expect all the strength and durability of RCBS. Plus, you'll get American-cast rather than Chinese-cast if you care about that. For dies, I only neck-size bottleneck cases until/unless I'm absolutely FORCED to FL size. I only buy Lee collet dies for that because they're so massively more cost-effective than the alternatives, and because they work so very well for me.
At this point, I'll buy whatever color or brand suits my needs. I have some RCBS items and they work very well for me. If/when buying new, I nearly always end up with Lee for the good experiences I've had with their equipment and factory people. I don't shoot 1,000 rounds/month, and it's possible that I would make certain choices differently if I did. There are some that I know I would not make differently even then.
OP, I know you got the Rock Chucker press and I'm sure you'll be extremely happy with it. I have posted this mainly for future readers/searchers' consideration and NOT as a bashing thing either way.