Recently got in the mood to fire up a Live USB on hardware for the first time in years.
Earlier today, I decided to put Fedora KDE on a spare drive, both this choice of distro being outside of my almost-wholly Debian-based experience, as well as the choice of desktop being outside my usual experience with "lighter" ones like MATE and (gasps from the security crowd) Trinity. Rufus'd the ISO then F9'd into the boot selector, and with a mighty roar of tiny-yet-dense command-line text, it booted. Thing worked like a charm on my Win10 laptop I got in 2020, with Wi-Fi, audio, mousepad, webcam, Wacom drawing tablet, and game controller all responding out of the box. So I just vibed on the thing a bit, with the built-in music player open to a C64 radio channel that was already bookmarked on first launch, as I checked some stuff out, visited some sites, played with the theme settings, installed small programs like cowsay, etc.
And then I booted back into Win10, satisfied with my experience. Not sure if I'm gonna make Linux a lifestyle yet again anytime soon, but it's been on the mind lately, and even after sidelining it for so long, it still does seem like something I could make use of for myself.