Amiga to me is curiousity,
something mystical.
At home I had a pc, but family of mine had an Amiga.
I was wondered (being an 8yo. kid) what the Amiga actually was.
Twas kinda a pc, but yet not a pc. And it had great sound, and much of the same games as the pc.
So these had better sound, and often better graphics. Whereas lots of my games were CGA, despite I had VGA back then (1989), the same games were in 'VGA' on the Amiga.
Amiga was to me like, like playing Out of This World (Another World). Strange, new and full of promises.
Until 1997, I never had an Amiga. Then I got myself an Amiga 500.
I got myself one to be able to play games while my pc is doing processor-intensive works. Tinkering with the Amiga, I learned how it worked, and I began to understand and admire the philosophy behind it.