Indeed not.As you say quite a good spec and at £25 not really ultra cheap so should be OK.
However any meter is selected to do a job and without knowing the job you want to do with the meter one can't really say if it's a good selection.
Does he need to test/measure capacitors, transistors, diodes? Does he need to measure frequency or temperature?
If not all those features are ones on which the maker of this £35 meter has spent money to the detriment of features he does need.
You can't get multimeters without a current function, and none of them can measure the currents in a domestic electrical installation, nor should anyone contemplate such a thing even if they did.I have never used the transistor tester on a multi-meter and personally I have selected meters with no hard wired amp range I use a clamp-on for amps.