I'm a little surprised that Stanley barely gets a mention in this thread. So, thought I'd fix that!
Everyday drawer. Most of the Stanleys are up to 20 years old and still holding up well although some have been replaced as I've bought new sets with sizes I didn't have and replaced the high use ones Vessel are JIS Phillips and amazing quality - I'd change all the others for Vessel but they don't have the long shafts that I need for work and Stanley do. Blue/black Stanleys (France) are Pozidriv and work well when needed, but don't get a lot of use. The new Stanleys are China made and I don't like the quality.
I really like the three sided handles on the Stanley. Fit my hand perfectly and I can get more grip and torque from these than anything else.
Long shaft No-name Ebay brand Torx (used to get to door handle screws), Gearwrench nut driver set that I hardly ever use except for occasional Imperial sizes and some duplicates/spares
King Tony (Taiwan) Torx and Security Torx, King Tony nut drivers (I'd like to get some more of these) and precision, small drivers. Really tiny precision drivers are in a different drawer, not shown.
King Tony are up there with the best of the Taiwan and Japanese brands.
Oddbod drivers that I actually use plus some modified screwdrivers, Sidchrome through tang heavy duty drivers, Stanly electrical/insulated drivers and, of course, the ubiquitous impact driver that almost always works as a last resort.
Bits and bit drivers. Lots of bits in Metric and Imperial plus some of the more unusual ones that I've come across over the last 20 years or more. Even with all these, a security tri-wing sunk down a deep narrow hole beat me recently. Had the right bit but no driver with small enough diameter to get down the hole.
The black/red Sidchrome ratcheting driver on the left is my "go to" if there's enough room. Stanley one is good too while the short Trojan is hardware chain junk, but serves a purpose when space is tight. In the centre are 3 low profile ratcheting spanner type drivers. The centre one is Gearwrench and is a lovely tittle tool that takes bits and 1/4" drive sockets and has a reversing ratchet and adjustable angle on the handle. Not much that that tool can't get to.
