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Thanks. I don't know if I'm wise, but I'm definitely old enough to have a little experience and cranky enough to resent someone being in my business all the time. Social media pushes us to share everything with everyone, so it can be fed into surveillance advertising, but there's some peace of mind in having time and things that are only, or at least mostly, yours.
As far as gaming goes, I was a PC gamer for a long time as well. I used to play mostly RTS titles, but got into online games and MMOs in the vanilla WoW era. I'm not beholden to a particular type of game, and these days I play most exploration and story driven games with less of a combat focus where I can relax and complete at my own pace like Stray, Firewatch, Jusant, and Death Stranding. I replay old favorites a lot. Portal and Portal 2 still hold up really well.
Outside of issues with AI, a decline in quality, and privacy, the Windows vs. Linux choice really comes down to looking at the software you use and the games you play. In a lot of cases, there will be something that's equivalent to common windows software, but works a little differently, Libre Office instead of MS Office, etc. So you have to consider your desire to relearn some common tasks as well. If you do try it, I'd get a second hard drive if you can, install Linux on it and dual boot or just keep the Windows drive around in case you decide you want to switch back.
I like Linux, I started using it after taking a class on it back in the early Win 10 days. I don't do anything extreme or crazy with my set up, I mostly run Debian or Ubuntu based distributions like Mint, PopOS, MX, and so forth. I haven't tried Bazzite yet, but I've heard good things. But if you want to tinker, go nuts, you can customize about anything if you have the skills. It's never been 100% trouble free for me, but neither was Windows, and for the most part it's run really well on my older hardware.
Linux gaming is a lot easier these days, and for the most part if you're avoiding big AAA online only titles, you can run just about anything you want with minimal hassle. I bought the Steam Deck for simplicity's sake, I was running most of my games through Steam with Proton on my desktop anyway, and it was cheaper than upgrading or replacing my old PC. Valve isn't a perfect company, but they seem to be much better than most of the competition these days, and I like that they're working to provide a solid alternative to Windows in a market that's been dominated by one company for far too long.