The collection, as the name implies, is targeted at AGA users, although the minimum requirements for some software (some application software such as emulators and picture files) is less, and of course you don't need a 4000/040 to read AR. A comprehensive AmigaGuide index and contents file is included, although you have to use other methods to actually access the software--generally, the icons are configured to either run or decompress the item you choose.
The CD also sports a small collection of original software not for redistribution, consisting of slideshows, Klondike card sets, and NFA's Out of Space disk magazines.
Complaints are few...I guess my only real complaint as far as the CD's content goes is that there are far too many versions of the NFA and Sadeness logos on the CD, to the point of being ridiculous. But they're more or less all in the same place so it's not an annoyance, just odd.
The CD does what it says, and creates an "AGA Experience". I suppose if you're looking for a way to justify the purchase of that new A1200 or 4000T and CD-ROM drive, popping in this CD and playing a round of Pulp Fiction Klondike might make you feel better...
Some PD disk collections have come in clumsier form, others in prettier (the Assassins CD comes to mind.) The AGA Experience is not quite what I'd call an attractively laid out CD, but the directory trees are reasonable and logical, and the necessary assigns are made for you with a click of an icon.
The price is UKP 20, or roughly US$30. More than an Aminet CD, but you're paying for a planned compilation of showoff software as opposed to a collection of the newest software. I do think the Aminet AmigaGuide interface should become a standard for CD-ROMs on the Amiga, but that's not anything I expect to see soon.
I never quite thought I'd see a licensed Amiga Report collection on the same CD with a "Big Girls" slideshow, but that's just me...