>>4402725>this camera fits my specific needsIt sounds like you found the perfect camera. Congrats.
Different people want different things out of a product. Any product. Some people might hate MFT, but some people also hate mirrorless in general. Some people hate digital. Some people hate film. Some people hate DSLR's. You should buy a product based on how well it fits your specific needs, not based on what someone you don't know said on the internet. And this applies to literally anything. Computers, game consoles, cars, refrigerators, pens, literally anything.
I use an MFT camera, and I keep a 25mm prime lens basically glued onto the front of it (theoretically, not literally). It fits my needs perfectly. It's small and fits easily into my bag, it was cheap, and it takes good pictures. Sure I could go out and buy a different camera and new lenses for thousands of dollars, but what's the point? I already have a camera that does literally everything I need it to.
Photography is basically an art form. The gear you use doesn't matter as much as how you use it. Just like how buying a drawing tablet won't make you a good illustrator, buying the fanciest camera won't make you good at taking photos. A good photographer can make art even with a literal toy camera. So if the camera you picked fits all of your needs and desires in a camera, why use something else? Maybe pick something else if it fits what you want and is cheaper, but otherwise there's no reason.