I purchased this black, 10'x20' pop-up for use as a black-out tent for high-speed image capture of firearm-related stuff. Comparing it to my white 10'x10' pop-up (same brand), this one is a notable upgrade.ROLLING CASE: Standard, soft-sided rolling case. I don't know if it'll hold out any longer than my 10'x10' case did which split on its third use when repacking the tent.FRAME: The legs are much larger diameter and at least feel sturdier. The roof support trussing appears the same, but the plastic joints for the moving parts definitely seem heavier duty.TENT TOP: The tent top has a silver coating on the inside like a heat reflector / insulator. I expected it to be like my other pop-up where sunlight still radiated through it. Not with this one. The roof beautifully blocked all light from coming through and it was noticeably cooler working under the tent.INCLUDED ACCESSORIES: The included stakes are useless for anything but keeping the legs from shifting along the ground. They're too lightweight and too short to provide any reasonable anchoring against wind. The included rope for the stakes is also likely insufficient for anything but theatrics and a false sense of security. The walls are fine for their purpose. The velcro straps and attachment / closure zippers aren't confidence-inspiring for their apparent build quality, but I've never had one fail or rip on me. So, there's that. One notable difference on how the walls attach... my ABC 10'x10' walls have a velcro strip that seals it to the roof fabric along the entire length of the top of the wall. The walls for this tent do not have that velcro strip and instead have velcro straps which are used to affix it to the roof frame.RECOMMENDED ACCESSORIES: I'd strongly recommend adding 12" tent nails for anchoring to the ground and using heavier duty rope or tie-line for all tie-offs. For my purposes, I use close-topped, 5 gal. buckets of paver sand at each leg, with additional weights on top as necessary, which are tied off through the frame at the snap joint and not the fabric roof's D-rings. The roof's D-rings are used only for the tent stake / nail tie-lines. Thus, if the wind does take the roof or the roof fabric fails, the frame has its own ballast system.SETUP / TEARDOWN: Setup with one person is an exercise in futility. Two people are the minimum. And, at least from my experiences so far, set-up is noticeably more involved than with a 10'x10'. You can't just grab a corner, lift, and walk it out. Teardown, however, is straightforward and simple and I could easily fold it up by myself by sequentially lifting and walking the corners back in. With two people, you can lift the entire tent and walk it together.