In my opinion, Linux is not and should not be a Windows competitor if it's not aiming for software ecosystem parity. You can only go so far putting on a facade of Windows with desktop environments when you can't run any EXE that you could on Windows and when this facade is still at war with itself in terms of how it should render itself: X11 or Wayland. And then you have this Windows user begrudgingly moving back to Windows after Linux wasn't what it was advertised to him, and when he went to look for help he got laughed at for thinking it would be a drop-in Windows replacement after everyone told him that it's "totally like Windows".
At best, Linux is an alternative. In the same sense macOS is an alternative to Windows, technically similar but completely different. But for some reason the Linux community insists on marketing Linux distros as if they were drop-in replacements for Windows, ReactOS style, which they will never be.
At least one thing Linux doesn't have to worry about is lawsuits for false advertising, because by this point the total settlements would've been in the trillions.