Unfortunately, that is a rather vague question. Yes, I've used Linux and yes there are differences, some positive, some negative. A lot of this depends upon what Linux you've been using. There's less difference, for example, between VoidLinux and FreeBSD than there is between Ubuntu and FreeBSD.
For example, at least with Intel cards, Linux's wireless speed is far higher than FreeBSD's. You may have to configure X--not entirely manually, but perhaps with more user input than say, Ubuntu, which does it out of the box.
The best answer is try it and see, and ask questions when you get stuck. If you're using MBR BIOS, FreeBSD does require a primary partition. If using efi, when installing it, you need manual intervention to get FreeBSD's loader in the efi partition, but if you don't, it will just give a message, you need an efi partition, should it be created and if you put yes, it will create a small, separate efi partition.
Again, I think the best answer is try it and see. It may appeal to you and it may not.