I have one. I bought it to learn on. As of right now, it is my one and only rifle. I think that will change tonight. Anyway...
Since it is my only rifle, I can't do a good job of comparing it to other rifles and since I just started shooting a few months ago, my thoughts about accuracy are not to be trusted. So now that you know my opinion is worthless, here it is:
I was disappointed with the fit and finish. The checkering was uneven. I would even call it ragged in a couple of small spots. In the right light, the bluing looked rather sloppy too There were what looked like some machining marks on the top of the receiver - faint lines in the shape of a semi-circle. I don't know if that is typical.
The magazines have functioned flawlessly. The gun has never failed to load a round when I cycle the bolt and it has always ejected the round when I cycle the bolt. That is probably par for the course with a bolt action.
Accuracy is fine for my purposes. I can shoot 1/2 to 1 inch groups at 25 yards with the iron sights and the forestock resting on a block of wood. This 2-4 MOA shooting is probably more a commentary on my shooting skill (and eyesight) than on the rifle. I feel like the rifle can shoot better than that.
I have shot my Wildcat, a Rock River AR (about 5 rounds), my dad's Win 94 and my CZ 75b. The Wildcat had what I would consider the best trigger of those four guns. It feels crisp to me. There is some initial takup (which requires almost no pressure), but then it breaks cleanly.
As a counterexample, on my CZ 75b, there is a slight initial takeup then you start putting some significant pressure on the trigger and it travels backwards then breaks. With the Wildcat, after the initial takeup there is no trigger travel before the trigger breaks. I don't exactly know what makes a good trigger, but from how I've heard others describe good triggers, this gun seems to have one.
Hope this helps!
Overall I am happy that I bought it.