That doesn't show a price for me since it shows as sold out. I wouldn't want to have to set that monstrosity up unless I was staying in the same place for a long time. Usually when we camp we are in a different spot every night.
The Kodiak is pretty darn easy to set up and take down. The main issue with it is you have to stake it (unlike a dome tent). I can set mine up and take it down by myself in about 10 minutes (I have the 10' x 10' version), though it helps to have someone else with you, but even with them it's still about 10 minutes, provided the ground isn't rocky. While it's best to stake the entire thing down using every loophole, I've gotten by with the four corners and one in the middle of each side.
If your stakes come out of the ground it will fall down. Period.
I got it at Cabelas - they go on sale pretty often. I think it was less than $400.
That said it's wonderful. I'm 6'2" and I can stand up to get dressed. There is something to be said about being able to stand up and put on your pants and sit on the cot and put on your boots, instead of laying down and trying to slither into things. It holds two cots, my wife's side table for all her things that she brings with her and that I allow so she will continue camping, two dogs with dog beds, and still plenty of room to move around, store shoes and whatnot.
We camped in it twice in the rain - once we woke up to 2-3" of standing water outside the tent that wasn't ingressing and this past year we got 5" of rain overnight (according to measuring how much was in the wheelbarrow when we got home) and the thing didn't leak a drop. IWe were with a group of people and it was a thunderstorm and a couple folks lost some $300-$400 tents that got blown all to fuck. Not us. We were as dry as folks in campers.
It's very tight when erect (giggity) and doesn't flap around and keep you up when the wind blows (we don't have the screen awning, just the rain flap on one door, so if it's going to storm you'd want to lower that and tie it down over the door).
Take down is literally: removing all your shit from inside (the bigger the tent the more shit you're going to take with you because you can)
Removing the two side poles and collapsing the thing, removing the other poles.
Going around and digging out your heavy duty stakes (this is the most time consuming). Depending on weather you can put in stakes everywhere, or just the minimal (4 at corners plus one in the center of each side and one on the door you're using.)
Rolling it up and strapping it and throwing it on top of your rack or in the trunk or however you're hauling it.
Save all the careful re packaging and cleaning for when you get home.
The biggest detraction is that it's canvas, so if it gets wet it has to dry before storage - so you need to figure out how to dry it once you return (I hang mine up in the garage and let fans blow it dry for a day or two).
The 10x10 is generally around $550 but you can get it for less on sale.
They make a 10x14, a 9x8 and apparently now a 2 person 8x6 ($300).
They all have to be staked, so you aren't going to save any time by going smaller - you'll save a bit of weight and not need as large of a plot to put it on, but since you still have to put in the stakes all the way around going smaller isn't saving you time.
Oh yeah - it's heavy. The poles and tent come in two separate bags (the tent bag is pretty cool with cinch straps and whatnot). So weight is a factor. You aren't carrying the damned thing a mile to a camp site. But for car camping it's great.