As a Caveat emptor - Just because a Kickstarter printer exceeds it's goal doesn't mean it's going to be successful as a company or it's delivery goals.
A story, from personal backing experience - the Pirate 3D Buccaneer printer raised over $1 million when they only had a goal of $100,000. Plus they'd had $500,000 in a grant before they even got to Kickstarter. It's now been over a year since the campaign ended and they still don't think they'll have any printers delivered until the end of this year. And the ones that will be delivered at that time don't have all the features that the campaign raised it's money with.
If backers are willing to wait until April 2015, they'll get printers with one additional feature that was promised (heated bed) that the end of 2014 backers aren't getting, but so far the company has said that they haven't found a way to make that work yet. And they pulled a number of features that are never coming back, such as a fan to vent fumes, ABS printing support, and their original auto-bed calibration set-up.
Add on to that that they originally sold the printers on Kickstarter for $400 and under, with $700-$800 being their final retail price goal. Then the pre-sale went up last year for $899. And now they are saying that the printer will cost $1300 retail, at the same time they are also reducing the build area size from 146mm x 125mm x 155mm to 136mm x 96mm, 146mm for both backer and retail units.
So, don't take the fact that any company got more money for their campaign than they said they needed as a sign of stability and guarantee of product. That will only come if the people behind it are on top of things and understand the world they are operating in.
I originally backed Cobblebot as a replacement for the Buccaneer (P3D thankfully offered refunds for people since they weren't able to deliver what we backed). But, in trying to ask questions about the printer and watching how they interacted (or didn't) with the campaign backers, I was getting a strong sense of deja vu and pulled my backing. I hope that they pull through and are able to deliver what they promised, when they promised it. But I just wasn't willing to take that gamble again.
I actually ended up going for the Craftbot on Indigogo. It's a company that was already working on production of their printers, but needed additional funds to keep the production line moving. They answer any and all questions within a day and post almost daily (sometimes twice a day) updates. The dedication to their backers, proof of product availability, and complete transparency as they go through each step of the process made me feel confident enough in them as a company to back the campaign.