I agree with this, its an easy and good drone as long as a beginner takes it slow. Make sure to read up, do pre-flight checks to ensure everything is ready to go and do some reading on common mistakes. Too many people buy these things and then complain when the drone is gone, because they never learned common things about the mishaps (high winds aloft, weak GPS singnals, etc.)
One thing I really recommend for anyone whose never done it, is to go find a cheap low tech drone that is suitable for outdoor flights and learn to control it. What happens too often is these tech heavy drones are so easy to fly and so good at holding their position, that if something ever goes wrong (like a loss of GPS sats) people have no idea how to fly them manually and are surprised at how far they will drift with no throttle input at all and think the drone is "flying away". If you can manage and control a cheap small one in the wind, you'll do a lot better. My old Phantom 3 had an ATTI mode switch so it was easy to practice when I wanted, but the newer ones (without mods) can't be commanded into ATTI, and the first time you experience it can be a shock.
Same practice in terms of flying home manually (and not just relying on RTH), and such.
Don't want to scare anyone, they are great and easy to fly and very often trouble free. Just sometimes something happens, and the better prepared you are, the more likely you are to be landing home safely instead of posting on here asking where did your drone go?