I have a few power bricks for guitar pedal boards, One-Spot CS-7, Tone City Substation, as well as smaller power devices such as the 1-Spot daisychain. I've had quality devices, such as the CS-7, and not so perfect things like the Substation, which is quite noisy.
Thomann's Harley Benton PowerPlant ISO-12 sits comfortably with the One-Spot CS-7 in that "zero noise/plenty of options/good overall power rating" category - but at about half the price! It's also a great deal less bulky, which allows it to fit below even small pedalboards with ease.
All the power cables are supplied, and with 12 outlets that is a lot of cables. The ratings of individual outputs also permits some degree of daisychaining since there is enough juice for at least a couple of pedals per output unless they're digital monster-pedals. You'll need to find your own daisychain cables though, if you go that route. With 12 outputs it is unlikely you'll need to daisychain anyway.
Three outputs are switchable voltages, 9/12/18, 9 for typical pedals, 12v for things like Boss pedals, and 18v for anything that can handle it, such as my Xotic SL Drive Red, which gains a lot of headroom when it runs at 18v. Outputs can be combined with a suitable 3rd party splitter cable used to join the two outputs and feed the current to the pedal.
For me, using this on a pedalboard with mixed CPU pedals (Empress Echosystem) and normal cuircuit pedals, everything plays nicely together with no extraneous noise, every bit as good as my 1-Spot CS7. I'm very happy with the unit so far, and a friend tested the isolation aspect and gave it the thumbs up with regard to the isolation, since some power supplies, including some older Harley Benton models, are basically just daisy-chains in a box.
I like the simplicity of use, and also the separate transformer/plug, I like the LED indicators that would highlight circult probems nd, with the transformer elsewhere, the slim profile works very well on low-profile boards.
It's a winner.