Don't confuse Watts (power) with Wh (Watt Hour = energy).
Both are important, but they represent two different requirements.
If you want to run a 1800W toaster, you need a system that can deliver at least that much watt power.
But what will matter most is how long you would be able to sustain that usage which depends on the energy capacity in Wh of your battery
For example, running your 1800Watt toaster for two hours would require a battery of 3600Wh capacity (1800W x 2h = 3600Wh).
Usually, the solar generators have limited max power AND limited battery capacity, so they are not suited to run heavy loads as even if they have enough max power, they could not do that for very long.
BUT for lower power loads like a fridge (a couple of 100Watts of power), or Internet and a TV (also a couple hundred watts), they can last long enough.
For example, let us say you have a fridge that on average uses 200Watts of power, a router and modem 50Watts of power, a TV 100Watts of power
That is 350Watts of power, a battery with 3500Wh capacity could do that for 10 hours (10h x 350W = 3500Wh).
The 2200Wh battery in the device you mentioned could do it for 6.28 hours.
So what you need is review the power used by each of your critical appliances (you can use devices like "kill a watt"), then calculate how long the battery of the solar generator you are considering could run that for, by dividing the battery capacity in Wh by the power you need in Watts.
Below is another big brand with a lot of different capacity
Goal Zero's award-winning line of portable power stations gives you power at the push of a button, a fumeless solar storage battery, and backup generator options. Get a portable power station that is quiet, fumeless, and portable, so you can use it for anything and everything, including home...
www.goalzero.com