Ok, I for one don't miss writing on the Amiga—my current keyboard is a lot better than my Amiga ones ever were, let alone after ~ 30 years. I'm not particularly picky about word processing / text editing software, but after almost 20 years I do really depend on the way Mac keyboard mappings work. (Recently I spent some time editing source code on the Amiga and only being able to use the right Amiga key for copy/paste was hard to get used to, for instance.)
But I do have to stick up for Wordperfect. Back in my Amiga 500 days, I actually used WP to write my emails. Just to refresh my memory, I installed WP 5.0 on my 1200, but that didn't really work under 3.1.4. So I managed to boot the 1200 under KS/WB 1.3 with harddrive support and that was a lot better.
It's amazing how fast the program is, and you can tell they worked on that: when you scroll by the screenful by hitting alt or control arrow up/down, if you do that faster than the computer can redraw the screen, it will actually stop redrawing and start redrawing from the new position so it remains responsive.
Now of course WP was made in a completely different world. In that world, we already had MacWrite and geoWrite, which were obviously the predecessors of what we use today. But back in 1990 or so, those WYSIWYG word processors were clunky and slow, and the WYSIWYG was hampered by the low screen resolutions so you didn't quite see what you would get. WordPerfect, on the other hand, made no effort at all to show you what your printed pages would look like, which was of course a big downside, but this allowed it to be many times faster. Printing to a printer with built-in fonts was also many times faster than the graphical printing that WYSIWYG word processors normally do.
WP on the Amiga does have normal menus, but WP was of course created to be used with the function keys. I also used WP on the PC at work around the same time, so having the two versions work the same way was great once you started remembering all the function key combinations.
WP on the Amiga did actually support a few Amiga shortcuts, like A-C for copy and A-X for cut. And A-P for paste.
Yeah not everything was better back then.
Back in those days the obvious way to exchange files with PCs et cetera was of course using floppies. But today that doesn't work so well anymore.
A few years later I got Wordworth 6 that's still on my A1200, maybe I'll check that out and see how it holds up one of these days.