I use this tent. I take it moto camping and backpacking. If you have extra money a little lighter would be nicer, but this has held up very well for me and I can set it up in under 5 minutes easily, and I can take it down in about the same time. I've camped in snow, rain, desert heat, mosquito hell, rainforests, Alpine Meadows, you name it. Gimmicky stuff is tempting but always adds unnecessary complication and is more likely to break.
I bought an Alps Taurus 2 off Amazon for ~$85. Not sure if it's too much tent for what you need but I've been really happy with it so far.
ALPS Mountaineering Taurus 2-Person Tent https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00AU6JTQ0/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_8Zf3yb4ENAA89
Very glad to help out. All of the above was really well thought out also and I agree with all of it. I was on my phone this morning (stopped for coffee on a motorcycle ride, actually...) or I would have typed more. Now that I am home...
>I still want a instant setup tent,
I don't mean to be preachy here and this is going to sound harsh, but really just forget about the instant up thing. Instant up tents are good at one thing - going up quickly. There are no instant up tents that are good at actually being tents, and keeping you dry and comfortable in any kind of weather. Like I said earlier, with one or two practice tries you'll be able to pitch any decent tent in two or three minutes anyhow. The speed really doesn't buy you anything and you'll sacrifice having a tent that works.
You definitely want a double wall tent The idea there is that you have an "inner wall" (sometimes all or partially mesh) that's to keep bugs and stuff out, and then the "outer wall" or rainfly which is there to keep you dry. It's kept away from you by the inner wall so you don't touch it and get wet during the night. This also allows for airflow and ventilation to keep you comfortable.
You also will want some sort of groundcloth or waterproof thing to put under the tent. I typically buy a roll of heavy poly sheeting (.6 mil I think?) at Lowes or wherever which will last for your whole life. Cut a piece of it that is *just smaller* than the floor of your tent. You put that on the ground which prevents moisture being drawn up from the earth, and then the tent on top. You want it just smaller because if it does rain, you don't want rain running off the side of the tent and on to the poly and getting puddling up underneath you. Some manufacturers sell "footprints" for this purpose which are made of nylon and custom made for a given tent model, but the poly sheeting is cheaper, more waterproof, and works just fine.
A quick look at REI shows these which look decent:
https://www.rei.com/rei-garage/product/142544/eureka-sunriver-2-tent
https://www.rei.com/rei-garage/product/130891/alps-mountaineering-taurus-2-tent
Amazon has the second one cheaper, but REI are awesome to deal with:
https://www.amazon.com/ALPS-Mountaineering-Taurus-2-Person-Tent/dp/B00AU6JTQ0
ALPS Mountaineering Taurus 2-Person Tent https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00AU6JTQ0/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_XkffCb3RAFVZS