You are most welcome.
The BSP an awesome little sequencer. Since I got it, I've bought two more sequencers including a Pyramid, but it's the BSP that does the most work.
The Bass Station II is a great sounding synth, my cousin has one. Different to the MiniBrute, but that is what you want. No point in owning a bunch of synths that sound the same. It also has a few functions that make it a little more usable than the MiniBrute, simple things like a note hold button for holding a note after you have taken your finger off the key.
I'd own a DrumBrute by now if I didn't have a bunch of analogue drum machines already (VBeats, VKick, Rhythm Wolf and ADX1), but if I can make the space, there is a good chance I'll get one still.
There are a lot of great products at the "cheap" end of the scale today that I'd rank up with the "high-end" products from the likes of Moog and DSI. The Minilogue for example, it's cheap in comparison to a Mopho 4x, but I like it's filter better than the Mopho 4x and would buy the Minilogue over the Mopho 4x. And as far as analogue drum machines go, the Drumbrute really has no competition. Again DSI has a similar product, but it's not 100% analogue (although they claim it is, then in the same paragraph mention it uses samples), has a 6 note polyphony and is super expensive. The DrumBrute isn't as complex for creating drum sounds but it's great as far as being a complete analogue drum kit with a sequencer. Nobody is doing anything like it. The Volca Beats isn't anywhere close (it's kick sounds great but using it make the rest of sounds disappear unless it's turned almost completely down, making it sound more like a kid with a paint tin and a wooden ruler).