Is that a dovetail joint in the corners or is that printed on also?
That is surely veneer on MDF, which (as has been pointed out above) is better for stability reasons than solid wood. However, given the producers I assume it is real veneer, and that they will go to the extra expense of matching it at the edges. Big slabs of real wood in a plinth works better if the platter is suspended (like the classic AR, Thorens, Linn, etc), but even then you need to worry about the wood moving with the temperature and humidity.
If you like real wood (and who doesn't!), one thing I've seen in photos of people's setups is taking a 'minimal' turntable (like the Pro-Ject Elemental or RPM 3) and setting it on a big slab. It is a pretty nice look, and you have more control over the wood and the budget.
I'm not a fan of a shiny film finish on real wood, like on this EAT (and on the Fluance), as it takes a beautiful natural material and gives it a plastic feel.
The Fluance turntables seem to be well regarded, and pretty too.
I considered those before buying the Pro-Ject for my son, especially since last month they were throwing in a free (separate) phono amp. However, I'm a little skeptical of some of the praise, as all the turntables from the Ya Horng factory apparently come with just one of two mechanisms (one electronically controlled, one not), and with a decent suspension and similar platter and cartridge there shouldn't be enough sonic difference to prefer the Fluance over other Ya Horng tables with the controlled mechanism. (It would be interesting to see an ASR-type test of these same-mechanism tables. Maybe the company adds some extra value to them? But people were claiming that the Music Hall phono preamp was better than the cheaper Rolls VP29, and if you open them up you see they are exactly the same, including the "VP29" printed on the circuit board and the same brand components.)
Article on Ya Horng:
https://www.avsforum.com/threads/a-look-at-ya-horng-turntables-and-the-akai-ion-pro-500bt.3084640/