Cliff,
You're excited, and I completely get it. It's pretty dorky, but when I got my first speedster, I got up in the middle of the night just to go to the garage and look at it. I couldn't believe I owned something that cool.
In a lot of ways, that night was a turning point in my life. I'm in the process of building a smaller house, which will likely cost about as much as the 6 BR place (with a big red barn with heated floors, etc.) on a couple acres we just moved out of-- all so that I can still have a "proper shop" with a lift, etc. for the car. I just spent an entire Saturday getting my car off the covered trailer, and replacing the master-cylinder (such an awful job in an IM) when I should have been invoicing, or putting up boxes, or drilling holes for plumbing, or any one of 100 other more reasonable pursuits. The car is not an accessory in my life, it's at the creamy center of it.
The thing is: you don't have your car yet, so you can't really be sure if you are going to love what you think you are getting or not. Kirk is by all accounts a nice guy, and I really do think he wants to build cars that people love. But there are some teething issues with every builder's product, and no small amount of guys who have ordered a car from VS start out as excited as you, and end up pretty disillusioned a couple of months after delivery. That's why there are sooooo many cars on eBay and the like with 500 mi or less for sale.
Sometimes (always?), the higher the expectation, the greater the disillusionment when the object of your affection fails to live up to the promises made.
In your excitement, please don't underestimate the amount of work you may need to have done to make your dream a trustworthy reality. Mitch Toll and Will Hesch are reasonable guys who had to pretty much rework all of their running gear to get what they were after. I'd recommend looking to Jim Ignacio as the guy who has done this the right way: Jim keeps the option list short, the expectations in line with what Kirk can and has done in the past, and just rolls what he gets. It also helps that he lives in Kirk's back yard.
If I were you, I'd read with interest the stuff from guys (like me) who thrive on getting deep into the bowels of the car, love nothing more than spending a weekend up to our armpits in brake-fluid, etc., and who are out on the margins of what these cars can and should be. Marty's WRX IM is an awesome automobile, but it also shares nothing with what your (soon be be delivered) car besides the shape of the body. They look the same, but they aren't.
The new Vintage Speedster website is cool, but in the end... it's just a website. I hope you get what you're after, and I hope you won't be disappointed. But true love comes after the mating ritual, when you've lived with this imperfect thing in your house for a bit. It could potentially be rougher getting there than you are anticipating.
Nobody likes to hear that, but forewarned is forearmed.