Linux really does not have an easy-mode.
You really do need a mittens-mode experience (such as offered by Apple, and more recently, Microsoft) for that.
The issue, is that most people do not want to learn something new, especially in the US, where our educational system quickly teaches children that there is no positive incentive to actually learning anything, and that you should instead just game the system using what you have been given, exactly what you have been given, in exactly the way it was given to you.
Linux dares to suggest that maybe, you can and should, take some initiative to understand what your computer is actually doing and why/how it is doing it, so that you can then actually manage it yourself, like a proper grown up.
There is a vast market out there that caters to people who for whatever reason, are unable or unwilling to make that investment. (eg, unable or unwilling to learn, unable or unwilling to administer, unable or unwilling to do both.)
For those people, there is MacOS, and Windows.
They deserve the mittens-- it is explicitly the reason they use the product. ("curated user experience" is literally a cognate for having mittens put on your hands, and being told you cannot deviate from the policies of the experience you have been given, in exactly the way it was given to you. EG, wearing mittens, and told not to touch.)