I have one. Looks cool, plays ok, but sound is SEVERELY lacking compared to nearly ANY OTHER uke you can buy for ~$60-130.
You will be very sad playing it.
I changed the pickup to a much better one, replaced the nut and saddle with bone and perfectly compensated both, and were I not a diehard Les Paul guitar player in a former life and like to look at it, I would have returned it. It sits unplayed for a long time now.
ETA: I tested nearly a dozen different string sets as well with little change, however like Choirguy said, the Martin M600 strings were likely the best out of the lot.
Sorry if this offends anyone, but folks that do like it seem
easily pleased by the 'shiny OMG Les Paul' or have little experience with better ukes in this price range.
Please read and digest these:
http://www.gotaukulele.com/2015/08/epiphone-les-paul-ukulele-review.html
(these are 2 DIFFERENT videos, both worthy of viewing)
Initial review
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37qX0k9a4Gw
Sound comparison to other ukes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMcsQnNh5kI
You are far better off getting something with a full setup and padded gig bag from MIM's Ukes or Uke Republic and they have nearly a dozen different models in this price range.
ETA2: there used to be a web site called 'Guitar Huggers' (no longer online) that sold damaged and broken guitars and ukes as 'fixer projects' and at one time over a 6 month period they were FLUSH with these Epi LP ukes that all had the bridge fly off.
Hundreds of them newly added to their inventory, at a frequency of about every 2 weeks (yes I checked EVERY day).
Maybe the factory has improved since then, but no way to tell when it was made. So you have no idea if yours will be from the production runs with the poorly glued bridge (and ticking time bomb) or if/when they fixed this problem