For what it's worth, the FlashForge Creator comes in at $1150, and is "prints right out of the box" without having to learn as much mechanical and electrical fiddling, or do or learn much calibration, as other printers in that price range. After most of a year with an SD3 I switched; before, I spent more time calibrating, fixing, upgrading, and throwing away failed prints than printing, but after, I have done so much printing I actually ran out of things to print. It's also dual extruder, and it's a fair bit quicker than the SD3. Print volume is longer on one dimension and shorter on the other two; this may seem like a net loss but I find when I can't fit something it's usually only in one dimension so it's turned out better.
Now, I'm not saying there aren't other printers in that price range that are better, I'm just saying, I have this one and I'm pleased with it. What you really want is to match the printer to your intentions; we can't gauge "better" without knowing "better at doing what?".