A while ago I bought an Instant (of Pot fame) brand "Electric Dutch Oven" on a deep discount around when the company filed for bankruptcy.
There's already rightful praise in this thread for for "Large pot on a hotplate as a small countertop appliance" devices:
This will change your life. I have it and love it.
I love my Ninja crockpot because it can brown everything that I need it to before switching to slow cooking mode.
Having a small countertop device which can perform a decent sear, saute, and slow cook is incredibly useful, and a multi-cooker sets itself apart from a pure slow cooker simply with the ability to saute/sear your ingredients in the same pan you slow-cook in. Even if other appliances like the big boy oven can do most of the same jobs better, there's still value in having an extra space to cook multiple things in parallel.
What makes this specific device special is that its insert is a complete enameled dutch oven (admittedly of middling-at-best quality) which isn't limited to the base it comes in. It seems like a small thing, but the ability to move the pot to different surfaces lets this otherwise cheap and limited countertop appliance punch above its weight. The heating element in the base is a tad weak for things like high-temp searing, so in that case I routinely take out the pot and put it on another device with a stronger burner like the oven range for that initial sear before moving the whole pot back into the base for a quiet overnight slow cook. If I start a pot roast and find it's filling the dutch oven to the brim, I'll stick it in the oven for the slow cook to heat from all directions instead of just the bottom. When the base eventually breaks or I otherwise don't feel like using it anymore, the pot inside will outlive it and still be useful for years to come.
The ability to dial in a temperature is very nice, offering granular control even if the temperature is almost certainly not very accurate to the true temperature of what's inside- no need to be at the whims of what the manufacturer decides is "low" and "high".
In my experience with both this and an Instant Pot, this dutch oven does searing, sauteing and slow-cooking significantly better at the cost of being able to pressure cook. Personally, I'm pulling this out way more often because I don't find myself actually pressure cooking that often outside of the occasional batch of beans or rice. I love slowly stewed fatty cuts and pressure cooking usually falls short of the lovely fall-apart texture I'm looking for.
I doubt there's anything special about it being Instant brand, in fact I'd say the software is acceptable but a bit janky. If you're interested in this kind of multi-cooker device and don't care much about pressure cooking, I highly recommend looking across different for an "electric dutch oven" or any other multi-cooker with a removable dutch oven insert and ideally granular temperature control.