Cool little trailer, but when I see nine million rivets and countless joining/overlapping surfaces, all I can think of is spots for water penetration, sealant issues, etc. The less holes/joins on the exterior, the better, and this trailer seems to take the polar opposite approach. That guy mentions sleeping a family of 3, plus 3 dogs, then goes on to mention sleeping two adults, kid, and a dog on one bed. LOL!!! No thank you.
Huge (for a trailer) off-road tires, 21" of clearance, a pivoting hitch coupler (with a horrible overall towing setup), and the video shows trails that can be done by a Prius.
The reality is that about 0.01% of any of us (paging Romer!) actually "need" an off-road trailer. The rest of us just like them because they look/sound cool and we like the idea of their supposed capabilities. (Much like owning a Ferrari and using it to get Starbucks.) At the end of the day, the rest of us go camping in places that any mass-produced trailer will easily get to (yes, that includes a few hours down a dirt FSR), and will offer 10x the practicality/comforts at half the price of an "off-road/overland" trailer. Of course, no MaxTrax on the front wall, so that's minus 5 gazillion street-cred points right off the bat.
I can't count how many Off-Grid-Trailers (and similar "expo" products) I've seen around here... and all of them were in paved, provincial campgrounds, surrounded by Indiana's finest Jaycos, Winnebagos, Forest Rivers...
On the other hand, when I do venture a few hours off pavement, there are never any expo trailers to be found, but plenty of those same Indiana trailers taking up good spots by the river.