I can't possibly give a full and honest review on the bike just yet, I don't have nearly enough seat time on it at the moment. But from what I have experienced so far I can tell you that this bike isn't a full on enduro/woods bike, it is not simply a detuned motocross steed, and it is not a true dual sport. That said, this bike has a little DNA from all of those segments and does a great job of rolling them all into one. It has the top shelf suspension from Honda's 450R motocross bike which is arguably the best factory squishy's on the market. It has the size, weight (close), lights, and handling of an enduro/woods/cross country bike. And lastly it has the wider ratio transmission, on-road refinement (in comparison to other plateable enduros), power to weight ratio, and the majority of the load bearing ability of a dual sport. It does none of these things exceptionally well but it does all of them better than average.
I think a lot of guys buy this bike expecting it to be a smaller dual sport that they can replace their 650/690 with and dump thousands of back highway miles on and while you probably could, that's not really this bikes segment. This is very much a 450/500 KTM/Husky, but with better suspension, high speed handling, less buzz/vibes, lower maintenance and all around reliability. I see this bike more as a 90/10%-80/20% bike and not a 50/50% bike like I hear some expecting it to be. It can be a supermoto, it can commute to work and back, but it can also rip down any trail or in the open desert and then take you back home via the street legally and with enough power and stability to do it safely while still having the power and speed to pass others at highway speeds. This is more of a connect the trails bike via short stints on the road with the bulk of your riding off-road. Think vacationing in Colorado riding trails during the day and jumping back into town for lunch and dinner via the highway, that's where this bike will shine.
I can see using this as a BDR style bike, exploring backroads in rural areas where you might jump from asphalt to dirt road, to trail, and back to tarmac all day long. I have a lot of that type of riding in my area and I plan to utilize it to branch out and discover areas nearby that I would otherwise skip over in a cager. I'll have her down at the beach this weekend for some beach and back lake riding and fishing with some buddies, it'll be the first time I've ridden her in sand. Standby for future upgrades and ride reports.