Some biased opinion
First and foremost, buy the boat, not the company. A large production company, over a five year period, will make dozens of models that vary significantly in purpose, quality, problems, etc. Ignore all brand bashing. Or brand praise. You aren't buying a name plate, but one specific boat.Second, read, look at boats, talk to surveyors, charter, and read some more before you make such a large investment. Write down twenty to thirty criteria that YOU have selected as important, from your own investigation and experience. You should give these priority according to use (liveaboard, safety, offshore sailing) and category (aesthetics, construction quality, convenience, etc.) Don't buy until you can make your own checklist and rank different boats by it.In my biased opinion, if you're planning on cruising out of the states, buy the boat, not the warranty and customer service department. These are great if you keep the boat within fifty miles of your dealer. They don't help you much when you are in Isla Mujeres. Sure, if the bottom develops terminal boat pox, you can interrupt your cruise, return to the states, and demand that Hunter fix it. You won't do this for problems that are most likely to occur after a short passage, such as a leak or a circuit that no longer works or a vibration while motoring. Hunter is unlikely to fly out a mechanic under warranty service. You will have to find some mix of living with the flaw, fixing it yourself, or dealing with foreign boat yards. Since I tend to fix things myself, I have always ranked construction quality and accessibility as very high on my requirements. I want the hull-deck joint, the wiring runs, the hoses, the through-hulls, and all internal systems within reasonable reach. I want to know that I can replace stanchions, find and fix a leak, and upgrade deck hardware, using standard tools. This is biased opinion. You must form your own.