The Royal Enfield's price point and design is what attracts me to it!
Perfectly understandable. I think two-thirds of all experienced motorcyclists have at some point considered one, however briefly, thinking that the price was great and the small, light and simple nature of the bike would be a lot of fun. I really want to like them. But the Enfields don't match up well with most modern bikes, and they have to be purchased with reasonable expectations. In the
MCN test of the new Continental I mentioned earlier, one of the two reviewers thought it was OK and kind of fun, but the other reviewer wrote this:
And the Continental is the newest, most advanced of the line.
I'm not trying to talk anyone out of getting one, and I only know a lot about the topic because I've spent so much time personally contemplating one. But it always comes down to the fact that the nice low purchase price will also buy a lot of decent used overlanding bikes, including such usually trouble-free models as the KLR, the DR650 and DR-Z400, and the Vstrom 650. Less of a challenge and less "cool," but I had a bunch of late sixties/early seventies British bikes that you couldn't trust to get you where you wanted to go, and the current Royal Enfields have left in a little too much of that "nostalgia" for me.