Y'all don't want to hear this, but most people aren't going to switch to Linux. Some might pay someone to install LTSC, but the vast majority of of people are going to cave to Microsoft and buy a new PC.
I used to hate on influencers, until Alec from Technology Connections pointed out that he is one as well. Kind of hard to hate, when I listen to him when it comes to his advice on using appliances in the house properly. Was being influenced without even realizing it.
It would be cool as a VR game, but I have a feeling that it's going to be a 2D title, given that Sega can't seem to figure out how to successfully translate their most successful properties into 3D.
Unless you have no plans to play Online, the money you'll spend on Shark Cards trying to catch up with established players will far exceed $80. That's why I stopped playing GTA V Online—I got tired of grinding for cash, just to keep up with the unemployed people who dedicate their lives to one game (I refuse to spend money on microtransactions in any game). Either play at launch, or don't bother with Online.
Y'all have been doing this with every GTA release since the very beginning of the series. I don't know why everyone keeps falling for it. The PC port is coming; it always does. Most likely around Q4 2027, or Q2 2028 at the very latest.
Rockstar does this because people have very short term memories. They're banking on your forgetfulness so that you'll buy the console version, and then the PC version as well when they announce it a year later. The Rockstar double dip is their signature move.
As a DJ with ADHD, it's great for helping me decide what to play next when I forget where I was going with the set, and mix myself into a corner. That said, it's not very good at suggesting songs with a compatible BPM and key, but it works well enough for finding tunes with a similar vibe to what I'm already playing. So I just go down the list until I find a tune that can be mixed in.
As for the usual boring stuff, I'm learning how to code by having it write programs for me, and then analyzing the code and trying to figure out how it works. I'm learning a lot more than I would from studying a textbook.
I also used to use it for therapy, but not so much anymore when I figured out that it will just tell you what you want to hear if you challenge it enough. Not really useful for personal growth.
One thing it's useful for is learning how stuff works, using metaphors comparing it to subjects I already understand.
I would never have known that Lemmy existed, if it weren't for redditors telling me about it around the time Spez went nuclear on 3rd party apps. And here I thought that everyone on Lemmy came from reddit.
FWIW, I've heard that they've recently been censoring any mentions of Lemmy. They're obviously afraid of reddit becoming a repeat of digg. Which is why they've been slowly enshittifying the place instead of doing all at once like digg did. Fuck reddit, and fuck Spez.
As someone who was raised by narcissists with anger issues, I can understand that argument. Still waited until my mid 20s, though, because I didn't want to screw up my developing brain.
That said, I'm still fucked in the head from childhood trauma. On second thought, maybe it would have been worth it to sacrifice some brain cells for a little escape from my family...
If you're willing to get a base model, sure. The PS5 Pro is a $700 console, and that's not including the subscription fee for multiplayer (which doesn't exist on PC unless you're into MMOs).
Edit: Also every Playstation (and Xbox) game eventually comes to PC, so unless you're so impatient that you have to play the latest games right fucking now, there's no reason to own a console. Even Switch games are fully playable on PC, at higher resolutions and framerates as well. I sold my Switch because the games look and run so much better on my gaming rig.
Regarding that last point: consoles don't come with TVs either, so you don't even have to factor that in the cost of a gaming PC.
Furthermore, many modern TVs are now being designed with gaming in mind, and thus have input lag comparable to a good gaming monitor (like LG OLEDs and most Samsungs), so the whole concept of needing a dedicated monitor just for your PC is somewhat outdated now. If your TV is good enough for console gaming, then chances are it's good enough for PC gaming too, so long as you did your research before buying and didn't just buy whatever had a good picture on the showroom floor.
Also there's the fact that multiplayer tends to be free on PC, so no subscription fees to worry about. The accessories tend to be cheaper as well.
I don't understand why teens want to drink, smoke weed, and take drugs so badly, anyway. (Shitty friends peer pressuring them?) Just wait until your 20s like I did; it's not difficult.
Just remember that there's always LTSC if Linux doesn't work out for him.