I've been using linux as a main or secondary computer for 25 years now (started with Debian), and experimenting FreeBSD at least 10 years, probably more. But always, I had to use Windows at work. Well, in the past 6 years I've been on posix systems only, mostly running terminals in i3. This past month, I had to use Windows to deal with a few things. I couldn't believe how ridiculous all the icons and apps are. I could excuse free apps of having unpolished UI, but this was ridiculous. And by far the worse was Adobe Reader (yup, my problems had to do with filling pdf forms). The entire UI is designed to get you to upgrade. On the left, options that are all unavailable in the current edition, and on the right a "This document is long, want AI to resume it for you?". Like, no? I care about my work and need to carefully read and fill up. If I wanted AI I'd copy/paste it to some AI. And everything a user COULD want, like selecting a specific page, zooming, adjusting the page display, was hidden and hard to find. As in, if you've ever read a book on UI, it would make you depressed. By my estimate it must literally designed to make the experience frustrating with the belief that upgrading will smooth things, which I doubt it does.
I really don't think I could use FreeBSD exclusively. For one thing, ZFS, as good as it is, isn't flexible enough for my data needs. Could it be my daily driver? It could, but I honestly prefer the bleeding edge of Arch.
I see FreeBSD more like my Debian. It's a sacrifice PC, the one you use to make sure things are kosher and won't screw up on the production server. It's not the lab workstation I'm running my skunk-work experiments on. Although, actually, I am running skunk-work experiments on, but either on a VM or ssh-ing into a mini-pc running FreeBSD. I'm sorry if it turns out my views aren't that positive.