If I have to be honest, it looks a bit on the shit side.
For starters, I don't see a single legit safety certification on the label - not even a fake "CE" mark. To me, that says, "we ain't even going to bother trying".
Then there's the green electrolytic caps seen right through the vents - those are almost like Teapo's colors... but not exactly. Personal experience tells me these are more likely to be crap like ChengX or Chang or ChongX... or whatever, you get it - cheap trash. I wouldn't trust these to last even past the EU's mandatory 2-year warranty.
Red selector voltage switch means no APFC, which is is both a blessing and a curse. On the plus side, no APFC means one less thing to blow up on you after some time (APFC circuits and cheap input caps are really good at that.) On the negative side, modern PSUs that lack APFC are typically cheapo crap. If we were back in 199x-2005, I'd understand, as APFC wasn't the norm back then and even good PSU manufacturers didn't always put an APFC circuit in their PSUs. But pretty much anything made past 2010 without APFC is usually not very good (to say the least.)
Otherwise, 17 Amps on the 5V rail isn't that bad if the PSU really can provide that much. That should be more than enough for a Pentium/II/3 and most single-CPU Athlon/XP systems with CPU TDP under 60 Watts and any video card other than a Radeon 9700/9800 (these are 5V heavy.)
For 65 Euro, though.... that's a bit too much for a mediocre (at best) PSU with likely cheap caps.
I would personally rather get something cheap (but known good OEM brand) on the used market and recap it if necessary (very likely) than buy something new that will end up in the same boat (or worse) after a few years.