Sure it's not. But over 20 years and more technology I'd like to admit, the number of times I've had to deal with these issues on my Windows machines I can count on one hand. On my Linux machines.... well, I'm going to need more limbs.
Or maybe windows issues just fly under your radar, but the linux ones don't.
For example, just yesterday, I was figuring out why Quick Settings in Windows 11 do not show up on a machine upgraded from Windows 10 (without that, you have to go to Settings app to connect to wifi or turn on/off a vpn). Turns out, if you disabled Action Center in Windows 10, then there's no Quick Settings in Windows 11 for you and no way to enable it back, save for manually editing registry.
In my experience, most windows users would not consider the above as an issue they had to deal... in windows. But in Ubuntu, they definitely would. Maybe it is the difference between familiar and unfamiliar territory.
Linux. I've had machines with Ubuntu, Gentoo, Arch, Suse, Mint, and Fedora as well as some more specialized operating systems for particular specialty hardware. Actually Suse was my intro to Linux.