Yeah, not revolutionary - critical thinking is a skill that's fundamental to so much else. Its like learning to read or cook. The base skill let's your learn more.
My usual specific go-to is how to search the internet for things. But not knowing how to search for hyper-specific things is the symptom of a lack of critical thinking skills.
Revive and delete all media, then delete the account. In practice, it likely doesn't mean much, but it does technically mean you sort of "deny further permissions" to use the data you left there. Again, IRL they'll use it anyway.
Also, don't leave an account associated with your name there to possibly get hacked years from now and abuse any connections you have.
Also an option if it's not tied to your name, revive it and sell it. Aged accounts can be worth about $50+ to sell to scammers.
Its such a stretch for an administration that has repeatedly failed hard to support its arguments with even coherent sentences. Not even kidding, the initial suits about mass firings, some US attorney said out loud that he had no evidence all government employees were criminals, but they just are because they are.
The Constition also has a pesky part that says all people within the county are subject to it's laws, meaning that no one in the US is exempt from them by virtue of being a non-citizen. Seriously, do tourists not have to follow laws?
The common thread seems to be one you have the basics and have gotten past the ego-based need to "accomplish" something like beating the game, it becomes more about enjoying the process, regardless of outcome.
To be fair, everyone has underestimated his incompetence that hoped he would enact their insane dreams. Steve Bannon, Putin, Curtis Yarvin, Kevin Roberts, the Proud Boys and 3Pers, Kanye, etc.
You should explain that to the few Steam games I have that work just fine on Mint, right out of the box.
It's hit or miss and depends on the game, and OP didn't really give us much detail. There's just no absolutes is ultimately the lesson to learn, which is why a dual boot option might suit them best.
You can always do a dual boot. I've had a dual boot Linux Mint and Win 11 for maybe 18 months and I'm finally getting around to purging Windows out for good. The Mint installer sets it all up shockingly easily. I ended up so rarely using Windows that at this point I would rather have the space back.
Admittedly, I do very little coding or gaming, so YMMV, but I'm also basically trashing PS Elements and MS Office Home because I know GIMP and LibreOffice do the job anyway. It was that $250 that kept me holding on for this long.
Do you not back up your 2FA when you set them up?
People should need to take a test before they can be on the internet.