I bought myself this bike below a while back but it was a disaster so I eventually gave it away.
It cost about £350 (481 USD) and I couldn't resist buying it when I saw it in the bike shop because it seemed to tick the right boxes, namely a nice stealth grey, and it was a so-called 'hybrid' model which mean it was a cross between a mountain bike and road bike, good for racking up the miles offroad AND onroad..
But my smile vanished when I got it home and began checking it out, because it was far too fancy and complicated for a simplicity-freak like me.
For examp, it had 3 different spoke sizes, one for the front wheel, one for the right side of the rear wheel, and one for the left side.
Each spoke length was only a couple of millimetres different to the others meaning they were almost impossible to tell apart by eye, especially if you were trying to replace a bust spoke on a dark rainy night.
Also, it had 3 chainrings giving a total of 30 gears which were far too many, and I had to fiddle like crazy tweaking the lever to flick the chain from one ring to the other, then fiddle with the other lever to find a comfortable gear.
The wheels and tyres seemed a bit too fancy too, as did various bits and pieces, so if I was out biking and something bust there'd be no guarantee that the nearest bike shop would have a correct fancy replacement item.
Next time I'll buy an ultra-simple no-frills bike for less than half the price..
PS- another thing I didn't like were the three welded lugs under the crossbar (see pic) which carried the rear brake cable, because it meant every time I picked up the bike to carry it on my shoulder over a stile or stream, the lugs stuck painfully into my shoulder.