Autodesk taking a 3-year subscription from me, and then not releasing a single thing during that time, not even fixing bugs, was the reason I decided "Never again does Autodesk get to bill me".
If they'll do it once, they'll do it again. Moved to Altium and although it was expensive, it was a 1-off cost for a permanent license, and I got ~20 years of use out of Eagle, if I amortize the cost over the same time period it's not so bad - and it's orders of magnitude better, even if that does come with a steeper learning curve.
The day that Autodesk announced they had acquired CadSoft EAGLE, I archived the Last Free Version (which is the full version with a license check, fun fact).
I considered going to Altium after Autodesk bought EAGLE but the lack of usable tools led me to KiCad. I bit the bullet and just learned as much as I could and have been helping others in my local area learn KiCad as best they can. Is KiCad perfect? No, but it's good enough for CERN to build stuff with and it's far and above better than some of the upstart open source schematic capture/pcb tools out there.
Since EAGLE's death, we've had a slow trickle of newcomers to the scene, which has really been awesome. KiCad 6 really blows some of its predecessors out of the water. I still need to learn how to manipulate the s-exp formatting that the libraries use so that I can merge parts/libraries together from some of the import tools for LCSC though.
If they'll do it once, they'll do it again. Moved to Altium and although it was expensive, it was a 1-off cost for a permanent license, and I got ~20 years of use out of Eagle, if I amortize the cost over the same time period it's not so bad - and it's orders of magnitude better, even if that does come with a steeper learning curve.
Friends don't let friends use Autodesk software.