This is a really awesome filament. Like other nylon filaments I've used, finished prints have a very nice slick dense feeling that other plastics like PLA, PETG and ABS just don't have. The feel is somewhat similar to Taulman Alloy 910. Polymaker claims that this filament doesn't really warp, and they are absolutely right. This filament just doesn't warp - at all. I have had one "failed" (meaning I couldn't use it, though the print did complete) print, due to the nozzle being too high, and the amount of warp I had due to the bottom layer being too far from the bed was roughly equivalent to what I would expect from printing PLA.
Right off the print bed, even small features feel extremely tough. This filament is no joke, and the inter layer adhesion is insane. Even features that are a single layer tall are incredibly robust.
The only thing to be aware of is that this is a Nylon filament - so you *need* a dry box/filament dryer. It will absorb moisture, and print quality will go down. It took me about 2 days to go through the 750g roll, and I decided to not put the roll in a dry box because I wanted to see what would happen. The first ~6 hours of printing were great, with no noticeable degredation of print quality. Over the next 12 hours, the prints I was running got more and more stringing, but it was never so bad that I couldn't clean up the print with a torch/xacto knife afterwords, so I left the filament out of the dry box. So ultimately, if this filament is nice and dry, it will print basically like PLA. It's just as easy, can be run fast (I'm running this on my Voron Trident at 150mm/s and 6700mm/s^2 acceleration, and layer adhesion is not a problem at all), and looks amazing - again, just keep it dry.
I will absolutely be buying this stuff again. I bought the "natural" color, as I'm 'dyeing' (get it?) to see how dyeing the parts I've printed goes. Supposedly RIT liquid fabric dye works well with nylon 3d prints, so that's what I'm going to try.
Oh, and a note on annealing. I haven't tested strength before and after, but annealing doesn't appear to cause the print to change in appearance as some other filaments do. I've done it on my prints because I want the 180C heat deflection temperature, but the parts feel just as solid to me both before and after annealing, so YMMV.