I got my wife one of the first burzes in Canada, a limited, to play with me at the track. The thing has been an absolute champ. My E30 is a psycho and I can't/don't want to drive it for more than a few laps at a time so this thing gets tag teamed at track days all day long and it just takes it. My wife refuses to let me modify it until she feels she's outgrown it so I have been beating on a bone stock one for around 3-4 years now and it's a terrific car.
I saw gripes in this thread about the interior and I'm not sure what that's based on. Granted ours is a limited but I'm an interior material snob and the interior in this car is excellent for a non-luxury car. The door panels are nicely padded, the dash is a soft rubbery plastic etc. It's a very nice place to be.
That said, it's no soft cruiser, that's for sure. It's quite stiffly sprung and appropriately damped. Which makes it really good on a race track, it's really hard to justify putting an aftermarket suspension on it. It BADLY needs front camber plates but beyond that... until you do a LOT of other changes, the stock suspension is really good!!! On the track... on the street it's fine but you'll know it when you hit every imperfection in the road and going over pot holes makes my scrotum tighten. We have two Corgis so I can't really speak to putting a BIG dog in the car but it's a great place for two Corgis to ride...
The main thing that I don't like about it for a daily is noise. Someone earlier said that they left the sound deadening out and I can't disagree with that. They also supposedly pipe engine noise into the cabin for some dumbass fuhraze reason but I hate driving it back long distance from the track unless I set a very pedestrian highway cruise. Over 120kmh, or I think about 75 in British units, the engine noise is omnipresent and the new cars are supposedly even shorter geared.
In every other way, I have nothing but good things to say about it. It's roomy, it's practical and it's reliable. We've had 0 issues with ours, except needing a new engine. Heh, don't be scared. It was a carwash who was told not to shampoo the interior, who shampooed the interior and ran the engine all day to run the heater to dry it out... with the engine washing bag on the engine which was sucked into the crank seal and plugged the oil pump. They returned the car to the shop with loud knock and ran away. Subaru took the engine apart, showed us the chunks of bag they pulled out of the oil pump pickup and I was expecting to have to pay for a new engine, since I never thought I'd get any money out of the carwash even if I got a court judgment. This proved to be partially correct because Subaru Canada came out and said we'll give you a brand new engine for free, just pay for the labor to change it. We did and never got a dime for the labor from the carwash.
Anyway, there are a few known defects, like the tail light condensation which we haven't experienced, a click/clunk from the rear parcel shelf (almost like body panels sometimes shifting against each other) which we have experienced but Subaru hasn't been able to find what it is. We never got the chirp although we got the pump replaced under the TSB. We also put in the Raceseng plate preemptively but we never had the stock tin cover plate on the back of the engine leak as some have.
I've never worked on the car since I refuse to do oil changes myself even though I have a lift in my garage for the racecar, not worth my time. But if I were to work on it, I can see it being a pleasure. The boxer engine has no giant plastic covers which is typical today and I didn't see anything I couldn't reach. I'm used to BMWs where transmission and starter work requires some serious mcgyvering of extensions and wobbles but on this car, I can put my hand on the transmission or starter while leaning over the engine bay. I know someone who swapped a motor in their car and he said it was the easiest engine swap he's ever done because other than a few wires like ground, the entire engine harness is on one giant plug - you undo the fluid lines, the couple of connectors, the main big one, engine mounts and transmission bolts (leaving the transmission in place) and the engine comes out, he said it took around 1 hour the first time he did it...
On track it's a pure joy. It does anything you want and when you ask for something it can't quite do, it is very gentle in letting you save yourself. It's a shame how slow a 200hp car is nowadays but it's a ton of fun bone stock. With some big tires and maybe 3-400hp there isn't much that would keep up with it at a track day.
Here's a few laps from a track day, bone stock car with some good brake pads and summer tires:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ylZuoorpxU0
An example of a brown flag moment in a 100mph turn that it lets you get away with. The other driver made a point to find me the next day to give me the video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EyCVcngohU4