Yes, finally! A thread on this forum where I've got the experience and knowledge to answer with confidence that I'm more right than most (25+ years semi-pro guitar-playing, 20+ years giving lessons). I've owned guitars made by all these companies except Cordoba. The Fenders and the Yamahas are the only ones I've kept more than 2 years. So that's what I think of those other brands (though some older Seagulls don't sound terrible). The quick and dirty: 1. Buy used. Buying new guitars is for silly people. But you can't buy it online - you gotta hold it in your hands. If it makes a sound you like, and the fingerboard looks flat when you squint down the neck, it's in perfect working order. If it arouses feelings of love, then buy it immediately. 2. Get the Fender if you want a thinner neck - their thin necks are what really set even their student models apart. I like them for studio work, but they don't project very well. 3. Get a steel string. Trying to learn real guitar after playing a classical/nylon string is no fun at all. 4. That whole "Buy a nice one to start with" is total bullshit, trust me. It always ends in tears; I've seen it over and over. Buy a cheap one first, then work your way up. Yeah, you'll move on quick if you take to it. You're not going to get what a serious guitar for that price range anyway. And if you don't take to it, then you have a dust-collector that you didn't break the bank on rather than a 400$ dust-collector. Lastly, you shouldn't spend a lot of money on an instrument until you know how to play it enough to know what you like. When it comes to guitars, as with pipes, informed taste requires skill. 5. There is no real correlation between price and quality in guitars, and name-brand loyalty is for suckers (except maybe Martin). Some of my most magical guitars have been no-namers bought for 150 or less. And all my worst guitars have been... Gibsons.
And, oh, most important of all: Don't pay any attention to what any of us says (especially me) - just get the one that turns on a light for you. I'm 100% with Jerry - he's totally right. If you don't like it, you're not going to spend time with it no matter how much "knowledgeable" people tell you that you should like it.