Silicon Nylon tents shouldn't be brought in contact with sand. You risk, that the silicon closes in the sand if you press it without cleaning it very well before packing it.
(For summer camping at the beach you can buy a cheap Decathlon tent like the Arpenaz 2 or 3. They are very good for that use and cost round about 20 to 30 €. And water proof and light they are too. 2000g without pegs weights the autoportant Arpenaz 2. Wind resistant only till 40km/h. If you hide it behind a hedge or wall it will survive higher wind speed...)
I own a Hilleberg Nallo 2 since many years and thought about to buy an Akto one man tent, two years ago. I looked at every other option and came back to the Akto because in my opinion it is the best one person all weather mountain and expedition tent in the world.
But then I decided simply to use the Nallo2 I just own. It's portable too, roomier and for me the cheapest option because I just own it... :0)
I bought it many years ago because It can be used for one or two persons hiking tours in nearly every conditions, nearly every where. It was a good investment.
I bought two years ago additional a relatively cheap Silhexpeak V4a in coyote brown.
That's a nice option!
https://luxeoutdoor.de/de/Sil-Hexpeak-V4a.html
You can hang it under a branch or under a washing line or use each nature stick you find, or you can use a walking stick, for example the Decathlon carbon fibre walking pole with the additional plastic cap. That's the right size, because the plastic cap gives you additional 2 cm to the walking stick and so it fits perfectly.
I usually hang the tent under a tree or a washing line between two trees in round about 4 meters distance. A central pole is less comfortable than nothing in the middle of the tent, of course. And if you hang the tent under a branch, you don't have to carry the pole!
That's a very light option if you stay in woodland. (But with walking pole you can use this storm resistant tent in the mountains too.)
You usually don't carry the heavy poles around! Only on full camping grounds you can get problems, but with just one tree, you can fold it in half and use it as a tarp, attached to one tree. Or you have to walk out and surch for a long stick, if you didn't pick it up before you reached the camping ground...
The outer tent of the Luxe Outdoor Silhexpeak V4a weights only 600g, and I own just that and no inner moskito net tent.
With pegs and lines my tent weights around 700g. !!!!!!!
And that's a relatively tough fabric, no extremely thin ultra light stuff.
I use the outer tent in combination with German Army folding mat (425g) and Snugpak Special Forces bivvy bag (340g), in very hot conditions with a light military poncho like the Defcon 5 (350g) as ground sheed instead of bivvy bag.
As you see, I prefere to use the lightest modern original military equipment with NATO Stock numbers (mat, bivvy, sleeping bag, poncho), and the Silhexpeak V4a is made from similar fabric in a similar quality like modern military stuff as a modern version of the old Wehrmacht tents or the polish army tent.
The german constructor told the calling German army that he doesn't deliver to the army, when they asked him. That's the reason, why they didn't get it...
:0)
Off course it's easier to take the poles with you if you use camping grounds, and it's the only option in the mountains.
But for wild camping in the woods the Luxe Outdoor Silhexpeak V4a is a very good option. By the way: I usually don't close it to avoid condensation.
But owning a really nice tent collection for all conditions and in all sizes, for hiking in Germany I most times just use german military folding mat under Snugpak Special Forces bivvy bag and SF1 sleeping bag. And the MILITARY PONCHO AS TARP AND RAIN COAT. 350g to carry is far lighter and more comfortable than every tent.
That's a really light and comfortable option if one doesn't has a midges problem or heavy wind and rain from all sides.
I prefere not to crouch in a tent. Bivvy bag and poncho shelter is comfortable to use and comfortable to carry. And cheap on top! And I sleep in the nature, not in a fully enclosed tent. I can watch the animals and plants around me, and that's the reason why I go for hiking.
I mainly use tents on camping grounds or in really windy and rainy areas.