I generally would recommend against bundles; they almost invariably compromise at least some aspects of the sound in order to keep cost down. They usually either have a lousy kick mic and great tom mics, a great kick and lousy tom mics, great kick and tom mics with awful snare and overheads, etc. Either that or they end up being just so-so on everything. Either way, you usually end up replacing some of the mics with other mics and never use the mics from the kit again.
At the very least, I would generally avoid kits that contain overheads, as manufacturers of good dynamic mics rarely make good condensers and vice-versa. You're likely better off picking the overheads yourself, IMHO.
Some folks really seem to like the Audix kick mic, but I haven't heard a lot about the other mics in that kit.
I didn't even know Beyer made a drum mic bundle. The two Beyer bundles I'm seeing from Sweetwater look really wrong to me. They're using all condensers except the kick mic. That's bound to be bleed city. Also, their high end bundle description seems to emphasize the off-axis rejection on the overheads for live use. That's not what I look for in a set of recording overheads. In fact, it's the exact opposite. I look for accurate off-axis response, (though you do probably want less response off axis, i.e. not omni).
It's hard to say without trying those particular bundles, but my gut says you'd be better off building a bundle yourself, picking and choosing the best mics for the job. It would be worth checking the board for opinions on the individual mics in those kits and getting a feel for which mics in them are good choices and which ones aren't, though, as you never know---somebody might actually make a bundle that's good. It's possible....