Well, i'm just sitting by the 6262 2x12 combo version(at uni), and it doesn't sound very good. The cleans are poor and lack the feel and response of a valve amp, and the distortion sounds like a fizzy MT-2 pedal. The (digital) reverb- a spring emulation doesn't have much too it, and the presence controls are very unresponsive. Overall the amp lacks in general tone, and sounds like a small solid state practice amp, not too dissimilar to the Marshall MG, or the Fender Frontman series. The footswitch is built reasonably solidly, but uses a proprietary connector that is similar to a PS2 keyboard/mouse connector, but with an extra pin, so i'd guess that if the footswitch fails, you'll have to buy one from them rather than fixing it. The build quality of the amp is reasonably poor, it feels and looks cheap close up, especially the plastic tolex. The controls are all PCB mounted, rather than panel mount, and are likely to fail quicker- there is some sideways movement of the pots as they are not secured to the chassis.
When you open the amp up a bit (over 12 'o' clock), then the amp starts to sound a bit better- at least at lower/no gain. High gain still sounds really fizzy and lacks any 'balls' to it. However, this being a 120w valve amp, it is very loud, and far outside a practice level that would be tolerated outside of rehearsal space. The 6L6 valves are Bugera branded, which are likely to be mass-purchased stock where quality could vary. The speakers are 'Bugera Vintage Guitar Series' which doesn't inspire much confidence into them- items actually labelled as vintage by the manufacturer rarely are.
To summarise, it's not very good, and 'the soul of valves' slogan is hardly fitting, considering the output and price. At £399, there are far better options out there.
Hope that gives you an insight into the amp :)