Honestly, I'm inclined to agree with you. When our employer wanted to transition away from Linux desktops (which I'd used for 10 years to that point) to Windows Laptops I pushed back and got a MacBook Pro. I felt like being unix-y made things easier with deep integration of the shell.
However, I recently bought myself a Windows laptop (for games and miscellaneous other things). When I've tried doing a bit of development on it I've been pleasantly surprised. The WSL2 integration works well enough that it actually is probably easier than my development environment on MacOS where I have to worry about lots of subtle differences (and since getting it replaced with an M1 MBP due to the battery expanding - some not so subtle differences).
However, I recently bought myself a Windows laptop (for games and miscellaneous other things). When I've tried doing a bit of development on it I've been pleasantly surprised. The WSL2 integration works well enough that it actually is probably easier than my development environment on MacOS where I have to worry about lots of subtle differences (and since getting it replaced with an M1 MBP due to the battery expanding - some not so subtle differences).