@casperes1996, it does not matter that Word is cheap and Pages free and genuinely good, since price and value and suitability to purpose depend on the purpose and environment.
@gplusplus mentioned that he already has the Microsoft Office suite for Excel, thereby getting Word for free as well, in a way, since his purpose of subscribing to MS Office is Excel.
It is a fact that while iWork suite is great in a lot of ways, for a lot of purposes, it does not work well (and probably was not designed to either) in the majority of the real-world uses where Windows OS and Microsoft Office are staple.
iWork suite would probably work great within a Mac environment, but outside of it, it is enthusiast at best, not professional. There is a reason Microsoft Office is where it is, and it is not because of its Word app, it is because of its other apps, Excel being one.
I am in a macOS environment, I use Pages sometimes. But in my domain, I am now not required to format or stylise my content before delivery, so there go both Word and Pages out the window, and in come simple editors focussed on words such as Bear or Ulysses that offer Markdown support as well. I can write in these apps, and export in whatever format my client wants in simple text that is not stylised.
If I were looking specifically into long-form writing, or even for myriad other uses centring around words, I would look at Scrivener, not the free Pages or the paid MS Word.
If I were in Windows OS environment, my first choice would have been MS Office if I could digest the annual cost, or most likely Scrivener since that would be a one-time payment and
suited to my purpose. If I were to number-crunch, and more so, if I were to work in the corporate realm with collaboration and number-crunching requirements, it must only be MS Excel, at which point, since the thread is about which word-processors we use, I would be getting MS Word "for free" and then that would make it the
first choice, albeit not the
ideal choice.
It all depends on what you do most.
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@MacBH928, you are right - for home use and for quite a lot more than home use - we need not look further than the free apps by Apple. It is for when you begin to need something more specific or something that suits your own individual workflows better that you can then pay for and use.