I think that the Scala experience will get even better with Scala 3, tons of well thought refactorings for metaprogramming and typeclasses, among others. Also, looking forward to (optional) indentation based syntax.
It's funny, because my experience is almost the opposite. My Scala skills are a bit rusty at this point and I promised myself to get back in the game once Scala 3 was released. Most of it I like. The new syntax, however, is really putting me off. My #1 problem with Scala has always been its huge upfront complexity and the quality of libraries, which are often over-engineered and not nearly enough UX-centric (cough implicits everywhere). Scala 3 was supposed to be a breath of fresh air, but I don't want to invest more time in a language that instead of getting simpler further complicates something as basic as the syntax. This change tells me that I strongly disagree with the core leadership when it comes to the future of Scala and what kind of language it should be.
Opposite for me. After years of Scala (which I like) I recently tried to port a few things to Scala 3 and it really feels like some of the wtf-implicit part is gone. We'll still need to make a complete idea about this version 3 though.