domestic (romanian) computer were by far the shittier both industrial design and reliability / build quality
looks like a terminal you'd put in a high security prison or something

If anybody had seen you owned such ...'a brown
thing' as your computer as a west-pupil before 1989 chances had been good you might got bought a 'real computer' just for having pity on you. In theory.
Reality: Eastern computers were almost unknown, and practically unavailable in the west.
As far as I heard you could have bought the one or the other
Robotron model in an
Intershop (maybe others from other countries, too. I cannot say. I've never been in the GDR.) But for that you had to travel into the GDR (for the younger ones: Not a casual shopping trip, because of
the fence/wall), and they cost at least twice as a comparable western computer.
Plus in west germany were lots of badmouthing rumours about eastern products. In this case some told us kids eastern computers were not in english (BASIC), but in russian, and with cyrillic keyboards. If there even had the slightest interest in computers 'from over there', at the latest it was finally killed by that lie.
So I neither knew nor heard of anybody owned an eastern machine, until 1990 I met my first people from the former GDR. Many (most?) quickly bought western hardware.
And I also heard, there was no so much software available (especially games.) Many, so I was told later, were happy when they got
hardcopies of western SW they then typed into their Robotrons.
Since the 1980s were the time when the very first computers were bought by private, computer interested people, many (most?) by and for kids. So many chose the model not primarily about the kind of hardware, and available software, but simply the price was crucial. Thinking about that now, I get to the conspiracy theory, prices for east computers had had to be higher than west machines. Otherwise maybe we had been using way more eastern computers, if not in the majority.
