Hello Michael,
Welcome to the forum. So you like nature and bushcraft, you want a high quality bushcraft knife that will last a long time, that is compact, etc. You like the M4 and want to know what people here think of it. You plan to also take a folding saw and an ax, so the knife does not need to do very heavy work.
A slightly better place to see the knife is here, 360 pivot around:
https://www.lionsteel.it/n/en/product/1768/m4_g10
Looks like a nice knife. I have a Doug Ritter folding knife in M390 and like the steel much better than S30V, it takes a finer edge more easily and holds it longer, although my experience is that S30V holds a "working" edge longer when you are cutting nasty abrasive material.
For camping and hunting it looks a great knife. G10 will be a bit heavier than wood, you can see that from the listed weight...G10 = 180g, Walnut = 137g
Might work for "bushcraft" depending on what you want to do. It's not going to make wood carving easy for you if you want to make spoons, netting needles and other wooden craft projects. The handle looks a little square in the corners, might become uncomfortable over a long sustained period of carving, and the blade is quite deep/tall, so it won't be able to make tight turns when carving. There is great disagreement about what is the best grind, single bevel, like the Spyderco Bushcraft or the Woodlore, or a secondary bevel on a flat grind like the M4 (that you could convex). For general purpose, the flat grind seems to be the winner, for wood working...depends where you are in the world and your idea of wood working
If you have any question about whether it is the right knife for you, you might do well to wait until you have spent time using a cheaper knife and learned what you want a knife to do and what they feel like in use, then find somewhere that you can pick up and hold the M4, or order it and allow you to return it if you don't like it. It is not a cheap knife to start with if you have doubts. My friend has a Mora with a 2mm thick blade that he has used while teaching bushcraft and wilderness canoeing for the last 16 years. Cheap, but no problem with durability when cared for.