I saw a youtuber say something like 'range rovers are like marmite, you either love them, and therefore forgive their little wobbles, or you hate them and you want everyone to know how bad they are'. Probably not quite true, but there are a lot of vocal people out there that really have some horror stories about anything with a green oval.
Looking at the posts above and to add to this, there will always be a friday afternoon car, in any brands fleet, that's the last car going down the line for that day/shift and the lads just wanted to finish up for the weekend. Unfortunately, friday just seems to have come around a little more often in Solihul than in other places it seems..
I had a Peugeot 406, it was really tidy, came to me with high miles and a full service history, it never put a foot wrong. I sold it, mistakenly and had a brief flirt with a Fiat. The person (a friend) that bought my 406, treat it far harsher than I did, not even keeping up with recommended maintenance levels. It still never put a foot wrong. So I bought another 406, less miles and still a FSH. In the first 8 months of ownership, it spent 4 in the workshop (on and off). I kept thinking 'well maybe when I fix this thing, that will be the last gremlin' I threw good money after bad, I struggled with that car for maybe 18 months. It was the biggest lemon I've ever owned, a complete money pit and looking back, it was definitely not worth the money and hassle it caused me. That was my Friday afternoon car.
I have an L322, 112k, FLRSH, I changed all oils and filters as soon as I bought it, just to satisfy me that it was all up to date, regardless of paperwork, and whilst this is still relatively new to me, so far it has been trouble free. There are little gremlins and a few bits of trim that have weakened with age, but it is 16 years old, so I cannot expect perfection.
Unfortunately, if you have 'the itch', you're going to buy one, it's almost as inevitable as death and taxes, so to add to what another said; just don't drop your entire budget on one thinking that the newer/more expensive one will give you less trouble, find one that lets you keep a little back for repairs, because it will need some, and knowing that you're not already at your limit will mean you don't go into the red trying to save an expensive old car from the scrapper.