Well coincidentally I have tried the Warrior recently. I have to qualify my following review because I do not play at a high level, however, I have been familiar with quite a few tables and played thousands of games. I am not associated with any manufacturer or store. I was/am merely interested in offering my opinion as I considered one myself for a local bar. With this said I will give you my overall impression.
It is a good, no, probably the best mid range table and definitely worth the purchase price. It exceeds any used foosball tables in the <$350 range. I would not put it in a busy bar for a number of mechanical and maitenance reasons, and I would not expect to run regular tournaments on them. For regular home use it is really good, for getting started it's excellent.
The initial feel is the table is a little bit lighter and mechanically sloppier than a maintained T3000COIN or of course the slick Fireball coin; sort of like TS. The playfield has a more pronounced texture than any tornado or fireball I've seen, I thought it quite ball gripping. Some of the ball position markers are missing, so it was a bit of a adaptive challenge for me at first, but I was able to adapt with other reference points. There are two balls now available, original yellow control and now a red tornado like ball. The red ball is pretty good and had some good tornado like feel and action. The ball return hose can get jammed up but its' simple to correct or adjust if you take the time or better yet, stuff the goals with foam to save your back. It does have plastic textured handles, but with wraps it is not a problem at all. As far as playability goes it is quite good, in fact it seemed really easy to control the ball and allows lots of power in the shots. The rod guards seem pretty sturdy, and believe it or not, protected persistant children over and over while playing that day. I thought them a gimmick, but I saw the reason why they added them within 10 minutes. I did find myself grabbing the guards on occasion instead of handles.
I inspected the bearings a bit, and its a pretty cool lock in the wall design via a nut fastener. I suspect its pretty tough and will last. I looked closely but I'm not sure if there is enough bearing wall so it can be bored out for real 5/8" hollow rods and use of other standard figures. One thing that was annoying was a dead spot at the foot of the corner ramps in the center. I'm not sure if this is a design flaw or just a spot that I hadn't adapted to avoid. Been some time since I played single goalie. The figures have a nice sharp angle on the feet corners... good for the slice angles, but will likely chip off over time as there is no chamfer/bevel to maintain the integrity of the plastic. I didn't figure out the back pin release point, but I've read good things about the power squeeze.
This table did arrive with some damage, and as I have heard from others, warrior was right on it and replaced everything damaged free of charge. I have dealt with them a few times myself, and they are really good for parts... fast...
Anyway, the warrior table seemed pretty good overall... I don't mean to beat it up at all, just being critical of its design. If I was in the market for mid range or budget home table I would go for one. I wouldn't waste my time with used sportcraft harvard carrom costco tables... If I still had the love for TS and couldn't find one... well I'd definitely go warrior. I think the TS is better built, but they are also outdated and worn... also the warrior has more of the modern features so it's better for learning shots and transferring those skills to tornado/fireball/shelti... I don't think it has what it takes for bars or regular heavy use, but this model is targeted and priced for home use mid range market. If money wasn't as much of a concern I would go for something better, like a tornado elite or performance games es or pro foos or higher.