Agreed. I own 2 Steez's and 2 Calais DC's. The DC's are still box stock (except for regular service) and just fantastic reels. The Steez's (103 and 100) have been tuned and that made them better, but they are hard to control in anything but ideal situations. The DC will cast almost anything from 4" t-rigged senkos on up the bass lure scale with the right rod. And where they really shine is in the wind. Try casting a wiggle wart, for example, with the Steez into the wind and then try it with the Calais and it'll make a believer out of you. The Steez takes a lot of adjustment to adapt to wind/cross wind, and by the time you get done fiddling with it, it doesn't cast as far as most much less expensive reels. Both will chunk a 1/2oz jigging spoon a LONG way in ideal conditions, but the DC is far more versatile and far less fussy. The DC is far heavier though, and the metal side plates are d**n cold in the winter time. So pluses and minuses.
I also have 2 Core 50's. To me, that's about what a Steez should sell for. In the right conditions, the Steez can out cast a 50 by a small margin, and both are very smooth, refined reels. The 50 gains a lot of points in my boat for being much less fussy. It's not all Daiwa's that are this wild, either. My Pixy Type-R, for example, is a very well mannered reel that is far less fussy, and it is stock.
Congrats on the great present, and that's a great BIL, no doubt. My advice would be to dial in a lot of spool tension and braking when you start using the reel, and back them down as you get used to it. Much less bird nests that way.