There have been a lot of suggestions , a lot to digest in this thread. There are probably 100's of options of mix and match. Now this set might not meet the criteria of something you'll want to leave your grandchildren, and its made in Taiwan. I have Milwaukee's 1/4" set in my truck and it's a pretty nice ratchet. This 3/8" drive set meets some of your criteria ,and it's cheap enough you could buy a set for more than one grandchild:
https://www.acmetools.com/milwaukee...iaRMF1r4uP2pqMaAknFEALw_wcB&slasRedirect=true
Adam Savage loves this set, or a similar one, here:
Goes to show that plastic cases CAN be well-designed! I agree that the design of this set looks stellar.
I'm just not a fan of "American" companies like Milwaukee that have turned into 100% importers. I only have one M tool in my shop, and it's one of the last US-made Sawzalls.
I'm also not a fan of "Japanese" companies like Makita that do the same thing. Festool has started doing it too, and it leaves a bad taste, ESPECIALLY when there's no price drop to go along with it. Festool prices for something made in Vietnam? Really?
I actually don't mind buying Chinese-made stuff, but it better have Chinese writing on the box, not the name of a Proud American City. The few Chinese things that I've bought recently have been shipped to me directly from China, in a weirdly over-taped box with a customs form glued to it.
Like, if I can get a "Fluke" thermal camera for $2000, or a Chinese brand for $400 with the better features that's made in the same Chinese factory with almost identical tooling, I'd rather go direct.
I feel like Fluke is trying to fool me, especially when it comes to price.
All these American companies bury the COO label deep in the fine print.
To unpack the price thing a bit more.... WHAT AM I PAYING FOR? Expensive materials? Okay, sure. The guy who polished this gets paid $30/hour? Okay, I get that. But when the guy is getting paid $2/hour, and the out-of-the-factory price is $8, I'm wondering where the other $92 is going for the $100 item. Transit and middle men is the answer.
Like, take a look at this stepladder factory:
I've been inside the Bauer Ladder factory in Wooster, Ohio, and... it was nothing like this. The workers weren't barefoot, for starters. It was clean and well-lit. I'm pretty sure that I'm paying for *that* when the Bauer ladder is more expensive.
So buying something from Wright or Ko-Ken is an FU to these bait-and-switch, high-priced tricksters. At least that's one facet of it, for me.
It's become a fun game: can I find something NOT made in China? Can I fill my workshop shop with non-Chinese stuff? Can I clothe my person in non-Chinese stuff? American Giant does make a really nice hoodie! I just got some shoes for Salsa dancing with my wife, and they were made in Brazil. ProTec and Benchmade knives. Lamy and Uniball pens.... there's some amazing stuff out there!
On the other hand, if you want the best drone in the world.... at least DJI is a Chinese company... Da-Jiang Innovations.
If there was a ratchet with Da-Jiang stamped on it, I might consider it...