Ok, given my recent experience (see above) of a getting a Win11 working (for someone who hasn't even had Win8), it does like to tie into an email/etc[1] but the biggest things are removing all those desktop/taskbar widgets that try to serve you the weather/news/etc... Which takes a while. (What? Why
wouldn't I want my lockscreen to advertise an image-library of alternate background images? Surely that's the most important thing for my computer to do, forget Office software!)
And absolutely every one of the pre-installed games are now trying to get you to enter a Freecell/Hearts/Minesweeper/etc 'tournament' and/or earn daily participation rewards. Also keep getting notifications for an XBox pass, or something, and going into the Microsoft Store is itself a minefield of micropayment invitations.
...this is Win11 Home, which hasn't been particularly jailbroken (barring that single setting to not just restrict installations to Microsoft Store), just politely but firmly declined most of the 'targetting' stuff. In setup, it asked which of several purposes it would be used for. Checking the reasoning
first, it seems it wasn't going to be like a typical Linux Distro's reasoning[2], but would be used to
push suggestions/alerts to you. So left it blank, in our case, which (in a worst-case scenario) will still send as many such notifications but at least not know which particular categories we would then end up dismissing/ignoring.
It's certainly seemed fairly easy (as in no worse than prior generations of Windows) to go out there and grab from source (or discs) the actually required software (LibreOffice, GIMP[3], the prefered browsers that
aren't Edge...) and get them on there. Couldn't work out how to rearrange Start-pinned items other than the rigmarole of successive and tactical "Move To Front"s in the right order. Pinning to Taskbar (the widgets to the left of the Start now disabled, and Start now full-left where it traditionally has been) is perhaps more useful, once you realise how it's a combined Taskbar (Win95+) and Custom Toolbar (Win98Plus+?), though without the actual main advantages of either. But it works.
In other words, I don't think you need fear Home11, which is probably default for most retail computers (that are MS-based, anyway). But be prepared to take time adjusting things and (though it's probably not as bad going from 8.1 to 10/11 as it was for us) dealing with the various (and possibly unnecessary) foibles.
[1] Needn't be an MS one, but we made one
just for it, at setup time, just for separation.
[2] Select "Home Office" and you'd get your expected FOSS office-suit added to the build, choose "Creativity" and you'd get GIMP/etc, "Programming" would add select IDE/compilers)
[3] They've updated their interface paradigm, again, of course... I think, between us, we've got five different 'generations' of GIMP across various computers, none of their interfaces exactly the same as the others (by default), with dockables docked or undocked left/right/top/bottom, combined, etc... perhaps I should just retain the installation binaries of one era and stop being astonished in the next.