the real problems aren't solved. brute force helps in many cases yes but,
even the game that seem to work will still have issues:
weird gfx glitches here and there, like water surfaces not showing up in games or other distortions of polygons, or even again weird cases like no-gore in fallout, or no facial animations in that other game etc .. it's not just a thing of the moment. it's something that's always here. it's been like that for a decade. and it's improving but barely, in such a slow pace that in another decade it probably won't have solved much of the issues yet.
apple whole software stack generaly speaking, is in a terrible, horrible, i mean unbearable state, at least in my opinion.
- macos latest UI/UX "liquid a**" is a mess and look very bad.
- base macos weight 150gb (fatberg laced with lard marinating in bloat sauce)
- no bios (macos masquarade as a 150gb bios)
- can't fully boot on external drive (internal drive with macos is necessary, remove that and the machine won't boot anything not even proper bootable external drive.)
- macos has very bad interoperability, it doesn't support other filesystems like etx4, btrfs, ntfs, etc..)
- no proper way to uninstall apps and packages , junk accumulate by nature in ~/Library/ and routine manual maintenance cleaning necessary and is a real chore. (just throwing an app bundle to the trash is not enough).
- OS has many shortcomings, doesn't support many standards (bad old opengl, no vulkan)
- many half-cooked features that were left in half finished state.
- macos "evolved" into a very restrictive OS. you can't even choose your own font to display the system. apple devs are very lazy, sloppy, there tons of bugs, and for all the features they couldn't be bothered to implement or finish they did put restrictions instead so you are forbidden to this or that everywhere for everything. no changelogs, no acknoledgements, no fixes, for years and years.. yes even for glaring bugs in your face everyday. "it's the apple way" ..
apple hardware is kind of good and appealing, but beware, software stack is in terrible state.