I have a .25 Long.
When I first discovered bullpups I wasn't interested in the least. I was shopping for a Sumatra or an Mrod or AT44 Hatsan. I had a chance to shoot all of those and then I shot a Cricket bullpup and man what a difference. I know the Cricket is a higher quality item than a stock version of the other 3 but it felt really, really good having the gun so close in and keeping the weight closer to me. So I changed my mind right there; I wanted a bullpup and I just had to wait until I could afford one.
Here is my initial review of mine and I'll follow up below with what I learned w/a few hundred pellets after the video:
When I tuned the gun I did it on power setting 6. I've since learned I should have done it on power setting 4 and I've yet to do that. The gun is very accurate; I've hit a target as far as 103 yards. It is very possible to double feed if you don't pull all the way back on the cocking arm. The first half of the pull cycles a new pellet in, the last 1/5th of the pull actually cocks the gun. I've only double fed it when I was cocking really fast to shoot chrony numbers, not even aiming, just shooting as fast as I could. I didn't fully cock a few times.
The case, fully loaded w/gun, scope, pellets, bipod, etc is quite heavy close to 30 lbs or more. You would not want to hike that into any measurable distance in the woods. Leave it in the car.
I'm not sure why this isn't showing up in other reviews and I'll admit I'm quite ignorant when it comes to how these guns actually function but whatever mechanism is used to achieve slower velocities on the power level settings does NOT save you any air in my experience. I also have a .25 so it uses a good bit of air any way but in my time with the gun, about 400 rounds, tuning at power level 6, I can get 2 mags at optimum power and that's about true at every power level setting. It could be once I tune at power level 4 that will change.
Do I like it? Yes. Would I buy it again? Yes.