I have the Milwaukee V28 set from about 10 years ago, and I used them everyday for construction work for 7+ years. The cordless drill would spin a mud paddle to mix tile grout and if I wasn't careful, it would spin a 5 gallon bucket of mud while I was attempting to hold it with my boots. For big or aggressive bits, it was far safer to set the clutch on the max setting and let the drill do the work. It could really smack you or hurt a hand or arm if it got caught. The sawzall is very impressive as well. The circular saw was great for cutting up 2x lumber for framing walls. It was rarely the power that was lacking in those tools, but the batteries would run out on big jobs and I only had two. For small jobs, most of what I did, they did the job of a corded tool without the cord. They were big and heavy tools. I also have 14.4v Milwaukee tools that I use/used for lighter work.
My brother is still in construction and uses the fuel milwaukee tools and likes them, but they just aren't the same as the older stuff that was usually made in the USA. The label is worn off some of my v28 stuff and I eventually burned up the motor on the hammer drill and the replacement motor was made in china and came with a matching case (not a storage box, but the body of the tool) due to a design change, so it doesn't have the original COO on it. That drill got beat to hell and I expected it to die much sooner. The new motor works great, but has not been worked as hard as the old one since I changed to a different type of work shortly after replacing it. The v28 hammer drill didn't hit nearly as hard as a rotohammer, but it was impressive for the size, for doing up to 1/2" holes in concrete slabs. Some slabs drilled easy, and others I ended up using a corded rotohammer on (1" or 1-1/4" machines that were huge compared to the hammer drill).
I liked Milwaukee's designs better than Hilti or any other companies for the most part and I would be tempted to buy them again. The made in China deal gripes my ***, but most power tools are made in China now. Some of them are good quality, but many are not. Dewalt and Makita are also good brands.
If you want the biggest and baddest, look at the top of the line and most expensive tools. Milwaukee switched their top tools to M28 (same tool, but the new stuff is made in China vs. the V28 AFAIK). You can get M28 rotohammers for some serious drilling. I haven't looked lately at what they offer. The fuel tools in the lower voltages might be reaching the torque levels of the old V28/M28 tech for all I know.