>>4014846I always shoot RAW because I can have control of the sharpening and the noise reduction. If my picture is naturally noisy then I don't add any sharpening but apply noise reduction. Split toning works better with RAW rather than with a JPEG for obvious reasons. Fine control of Chromatic Aberration and Fringing is also wonderful.
I have been shooting for a while at a permanent -2 exposure compensation in order to preserve the highlights in any kind of situation, RAW helps me achieve a proper exposure. I would suggest that you research how the Exposure, Brightness, Curves, Clarity, Sharpening, Noise reduction sliders work, then you will see that RAW gives you more headroom for playing with said sliders (JPEG can also be altered with those parameters but not as deeply as in RAW).