Research before going with a distro helps. Like why didn't you look into compatability for your hardware first? That would have given you ideas as to what issues you may face.
The issues you are having many others don't. You getting angry at people who have commented is comical. Like relax dude.
Just because your setup didn't work as you expected "out of the box" doesn't mean that's the case 100% of the time.
Linux is great for a daily driver. Use whatever tools you want. Just stop bitching. Are a kid? Because your behavior points that direction.
The Linux community is generally helpful, and if you don't work with the folks trying to help, you won't make any progress.
I turned on query logging for my PiHole. I chose a random site I don't typically browse, and confirmed I saw it logged in my PiHole. Though, I am thinking it's likely DNS that's causing issues.
I even tried turning off split tunneling, and it does the same thing.
I checked automatic DNS setting on my phone.
I don't know if it will make a difference but the DNS records for my local services are CNAME records, so I am going to change it to an A/AAAA record on PiHole.
I kept saying once upon a time"I'll make the switch to Linux but X doesn't work, so not yet. "
I dual booted for a while. That "a while" ended when Windows ate GRUB.
I had enough. I decided enough was enough. I kept windows on one SSD, just in case I wanted to go back. That didn't last long, I wiped that drive, and formatted it to BTRFS. Now none of my drives are NTFS.
For the one case I "need" Windows, I spun up a VM (and configured USB passthrough) for Windows. That is for a guitar pedal and amp that I need Windows for updates. But I don't remember the last time I booted up that VM.
For music recording and production I installed Reaper for Linux natively, but that was an easy transition considering Reaper was what i used in Windows. Sure VSTs were a big concern for me, so I investigated VST bridge type software. And I can't recall the ones I investigated. But this is where I am at on my journey.
I don't care how "easy" it is to just stay the same and keep using Windows, it isn't for me. I don't agree with their data collection policies. I don't agree with the "black box" mentality. I want to know what is happening on my system. I want to understand what I am using. And at a certain point with Windows, I just don't have the ability, tools, or inside scoop to fully learn that.
With Linux, the journey may have taken time, effort, and willingness to troubleshoot and learn but it ultimately is a better experience.
There have been very few games I couldn't get working on my system, but those games aren't enough to sell out my ideals. I will never go back.
And you're missing the point: do your own research