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I've never found any paid software to be better at what it does than a FOSS version if one exists, and almost everything one can do with a computer has a FOSS version to do it with these days.
If I really can't find something I want that does what I need the way I need it done... I make it myself.
If you're talking functionality, I'll introduce you to some:
Amost all paid audio production software is leagues better than the free alternatives. And beyond that, many VSTs don't work under Linux.
The sad truth is that most Adobe products still beat their free alternatives in features. Those alternatives are definitely good enough for 95% of people but they aren't better
Autodesk software. AutoCAD has some competition (for basic things) but there's nothing for Revit. Actually a TON of construction/infrastructure software doesn't have a better alternatives, not just Autodesk
Those were my 3 sticking points (I switched anyway)
AutoCAD was top of my list.
I fucking hate AutoCAD (I use it professionally) but there's nothing better and I really doubt a free alternative can top it. AutoLISP alone makes it unbeatable
Every single major commercial 3D CAD suite is still better than FreeCAD. FreeCAD is not the unusable beast it used to be, in fact it’s very much better, but it has technical debt and structural limitations that just keep it worse.
And this infuriates me because the market for those suites is so oppressively terrible.
Like, hell, I don't even need the full suite of simulation and modeling tools that they come with. Just give me a rock-solid parametric CAD engine, a decent rendering suite tacked on to it, and I'd really love it if anyone in this market could start investigating Linux compatibility! Hell, I'd even pay for that - just not the awful licensing regimes the current offerings operate under.
I bought Alibre Design, as it was a less oppressive situation license-wise, but these days I find I’m using it less than I might simply because I prefer staying in Linux for literally anything else. It was a bit pricy, but at least it was a perpetual license. I am hearing that while they don’t intend to support Linux, they’re moving away from some of the libraries that have prevented Proton from working.
The rest are varying degrees of oppressive lock-in and feature erosion. PTC/OnShape in particular has a huge “Fuck-You” attitude towards anybody who wants to consider throwing a design up on Etsy or selling a few trinkets without paying out the ass for a professional-grade subscription, and being the only fully mature web-based tool, it’s the only one that works properly in Linux.
+1 for Alibre.
With v29 (release probably in march) they are changing the UI framework, the last thing preventing it on any other OSs. In the latest live stream on YouTube they hinted that they would look into a Linux port if there is enough interest. 3 of 4 hosts in the stream gave a thumbs up for Linux, so there is hope.
Edit: Link to the stream https://youtu.be/uDheVp1OH4Y?t=5184
Compared to other CAD its cheap as hell. Especially if you don't need the all features, you can get Atom3D for less than 300€. For everyone interested: wait for promotions, the price is heavily discounted a few times per year.
I would kill for Rhino 3D on Linux…
However, these days I usually prefer OpenSCAD to Grasshopper for parametric.
Almost all video game genres are overwhelmingly dominated by closed-source, commercial software. FOSS generally isn't competitive there.
I'd give FOSS the upper hand in traditional roguelikes and playing card solitaire implementations, maybe. Maybe chess AIs. Purely-text interactive fiction of the stuff that one might find on The Interactive Fiction Archive isn't mostly FOSS, but is frequently non-commercial.
That's a pretty small portion of what game stuff is out there.
But, yeah, for most non-game stuff, I'd agree; I'd rather use the FOSS options.
FOSS music packages are lacking compared to their commercial counterparts. I like and have made a few pieces using LMMS, but I'm under no delusion that it's better than, say FL Studio or Ableton Live.
Datadog beats the pants off Prometheus, Grafana, and friends.
DAWs. LMMS is only really functional as introductory software, to see if you like the workflow before you graduate to a paid DAW IMO. Maybe when Audacity introduces the requisite features to be considered a DAW it'll be better, but that's at least a decade down the line.