I got that set for a tenner when I bought a multitool there last weekend.
I got a set of torx drivers years ago from a market stall in Leeds for fiddling with the lock on the lenses on my sunglasses, among other things and they've lasted well. Cost me all of a £5, I'll be willing to bet eBay has something similar.
Edit - found the same thing on Toolstation's site for a wee bit cheaper. The caveat of these things is you'll need a screwdriver head/drill to slot them into.
What's it in, and have you got any torx bits already?
I've had success in the past with using a centre punch to bang the security pin out and then using a normal torx bit, although obviously that's not idea if it's in something fragile/the torx screw isn't made from finest chinesium.
Just get pretty much any old cheap set with the right bit (looks to be T10 from your pic), the amount of force you'll be putting on it and the amount of use it'll get (I'm assuming this is pretty much a one off need?) you don't need to worry about bits rounding off or anything.
Some of the cheap tools are made with really poor quality steel that's got no strength. In particular drill bits that will last for maybe half a hole before they go dull or just overheat and snap in two.
“People Are Killing Puppy Clones That Don't Come Out 'Perfect'”
The free ones that come bundled with things like mobile phone batteries are always entertaining. I have had some that are OK, but some are so bad you've got to despair of the human race wasting the Earth's resources to make them. T10 is a bit big for a mobile phone though.
never trust a man in a blue trench coat, never drive a car when you're dead
Step 1: Get Ireland to unite, team up with Scotland.
Step 2: Get them to take over the rest of the UK.
Step 3: Celebrate the United Republic of Ireland and Britain with tea and flapjacks.
They can be serviceable (or even good) in a pinch: while on vacation last year, the mirror on my film slr got stuck*, an ongoing issue that can be remediated by unscrewing the bottom plate and oiling gears (as I learned from a web tutorial, except my body is an older and more simple model than shown).
I needed a very small phillips head screwdriver, so I bought a set of miniature screwdrivers at ye local dollarstore, and had the camera back in action in <1 hour.
*blocking the viewfinder. I took several more, perfectly good shots using the point-and-shoot method, to ascertain this would not dislodge the stuck mirror.
“People Are Killing Puppy Clones That Don't Come Out 'Perfect'”