Ours are somewhat like a Kampmaster.
Now that I own a pop-top teardrop that has room to stand, I have a better appreciation for the merits of pure no-standing-room teardrop.
A pure classic small teardrop design ends up being a great sleeper, probably better than my pop-top. We can't have cabinetry above the foot end of the bed, that's where we stand and our back window is there.
When space is so hard to come by, losing even a little matters. In a classic teardrop you know exactly where the sleeping position is, and you can pack nice cabinets tightly nearby.
The 3 tiny travel trailer designs that have passed the test of time and are widely purchased are a pure no-standing teardrop with an outdoor galley; a little canned ham like a Shasta or Serro Scotty or a Scamp; or a classic folding tent trailer pop-up. There's a reason for that. Anything else, like ours, becomes a compromise that is neither fish nor foul -not a bigger roomy standy, and not a super small, tow-it-with-your-economy-car teardrop.
For ours, at least we don't have damp and musty canvas like a tent trailer or a Kampmaster. That was a big requirement for us.
But our compromise ends up being a taller and wider trailer to tow than a classic teardrop with less inside storage.
The Kampmaster seems the worst compromise to me. On a rainy weekend you'll be damp from the canvas side walls. It has small bed. It has no spacious outdoor galley.