I'm always leery about buying, recommending, depending on commercially prepared kits. I have yet to find a kit I even marginally agree with on every choice. A kit that is good now can slide when the manufacturers cut costs. Month to month quality can vary widely. There is also the fact that a kit is designed around a situation. If my emergency situation differs from the needs the kit was designed to address you are going to end up with excesses and holes.

There is also the question of cost. Many companies that assemble kits are small. Some may only sell a few hundred kits a year. Because of this they buy the gear and supplies retail. Often not much cheaper than what you or I could get from local stores. Which is okay but the company has overhead, expenses, and a desire for some profit. If you buy retail and then sell it you are going to mark it up to, typically twice or three times, what you got it for. Which explains why so often survival kits have stuff you could buy at the local big-box for $100 selling for $200 or more.

I've found I can pretty easily assemble a better kit, one fitted to my disposition and situation, for much less.

That said I think the Shelterbox offering is not a bad selection of gear. The stove is certainly interesting. I'm not sure where I could buy one. Any ideas?

The weakness is in the price. Wow. That's, what ... better than $700 in USD?