Nothing bad to say about my 18V Makita drill (it's one of the lighter LXT ones with a brushed motor). Or the circular saw, until I dropped it[1]. The little hoover thing[2] is rather handy for swarf, random stairs-mud and sucking up LED legs. The multi-function oscillating tool is also brilliant, but it's designed for someone with significantly larger hands than me.
The batteries are evil, though, as the management electronics will brick itself in response to three failed attempts to charge. 'Safety' feature apparently: The problem comes when you leave the battery lying around for long enough that whichever cell powers the management electronics goes under voltage, which means it fails to charge. "Hmm" you think, and remove and replace it in the charger, thinking it's not seated properly. Still not charging. You now have one more go. At this point you need to be savvy enough to dismantle the battery and charge the cells back up to spec individually with a lab power supply or similar before letting it near the official charger again, otherwise its game over.
In practice, I've yet to experience this failure mode[3], but I'm careful to recharge the batteries after use, and they generally get used for something every few weeks. If it's going to spend a lot of time gathering dust, another manufacturer might be a better bet.
[1] Causing the dust extraction attachment thingy to snap off. I was able to obtain a replacement for under a fiver. And then repair the original with epoxy while waiting for it to be delivered.
[2] Dyson fangirl MIL kept threatening to buy me a cordless Dyson thing. So I bought the Makita as a pre-emptive strike.
[3] I've had three batteries: Two official Makita 3Ah ones bought in 2014 and 2017 respectively, still going strong. One Chinesium knock-off that died of chronic cell-imbalance within a couple of years of light use. Turns out that the imitations don't even attempt to balance the cells, which makes them a false economy unless you particularly enjoy hacking batteries.