Resolve works great on Linux. The "Studio" edition is required for some codecs. Major graphics cards all have native Linux drivers available for download.
First time Linux-Resolve set-ups will likely require some self-teaching regarding the Linux OS, but once the rush kicks in, there's no retreating from an opensource operating-system. Basically: if you know your way around a 35mm analog SLR, you're already in the prerequisite-intelligence demographic:
Other migration tips for anyone who wants to taste the Linux "rich stuff" (The Goonies - 1985):
Instead of Photoshop -> Use: Krita / Darktable / RawTherapee /Blender
Instead of Microsoft Office -> Use: Libreoffice
Instead of InDesign -> Use: Scribus
Instead of Illustrator -> Use Inkscape
Instead of Ableton Live / ProTools -> Use Bitwig Studio (not opensource) / Ardour / etc.
I use all of this Linux software, in a professional context, and haven't touched a non-Linux system for over six years (yep, I don't carry a 'smart'phone). The most effective protest against fascism / late-stage phoney-capitalism is to stop using the products of that system. Protest without action is just noise.
The greatest trick these legacy-corporations have pulled is convincing the public that there is no alternative to their slop. Even if you start simply by running Linux in parallel with your existing legacy-surveillance-OS, at least you have an exit strategy from the subscription-crackhouse that Adobe and others are running.
Don't be another node on their networked fear-grid.
Good luck!
Volkswagen / Enshittification
On the topic of VW cars (earlier in this thread): If you think VW's new subscription policy is offensive, take a look at what Volkswagen did throughout World War II.
Volkswagen built and ran Nazi concentration camps
Volkswagen routinely murdered the children of their slave-laborers. Volkswagen didn't merely collaborate with the Nazis. Volkswagen are the Nazis. VW are still genociding humanity, to this day, via faked-emissions tests (SOURCE: Scientific American).
I'm not sure if any present-day Volkswagen customer is buying these vehicles with informed consent. This photograph should, by law, be placed on the door of every VW dealership. Then customers can make an informed choice:
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