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This metabo one is a good saw, from a decent brand, is under £140 and looks to be able to run on festool rails (metabo has their own brand available which would probably cost less).
Edit: I've said pretty much the same as @nefarious just in a more long winded fashion.
Plunge saws excell at breaking down sheet goods.
Some sites will drop a pallet of ply etc in the middle of where it needs to be and other than lifting the top sheet up to put bearers under it so that you don't cut into the second sheet you can process it there without the manual handling risks associated with moving a full sheet about the place. In addition to this processing sheet materials in a table saw can be dangerous and tricky, it's also very easy to get wrong (unless you buy a very expensive saw with a large sliding table). It's also possible to buy what festool call an mft (you can make your own without the festool hipster tax) that is designed to allow you to make precise, square, repeatable cuts quicky and efficiently Peter Millard shows how to do this well in a lot of his videos.
Table saws are excellent at ripping timber stock down to an accurate width. They also have a use with sheet goods; once you are trying to cut something that is thinner than the rails it's tricky and easy to fuck up so a tablesaw with a good fence will work wonders.
I forgot to mention with the plunge saw chat before a regular circular saw that can run on tracks is much cheaper than a plunge saw, much more versatile than a plunge saw and can do everything a plunge saw can. The main reason that I have my plunge saw is that the dust extraction is sooooo much better than a normal circ saw so if I'm working in an occupied house I'm causing fewer dust issues.