2014: "You guys should be careful building your industry around proprietary tools, you really should think about open source-" "Blah blah blah stop your moralizing, open source software isn't 100% ready to go right now so we absolutely can't use it, instead we're just going to pay money for this turnkey solution."
2023: "Help! The proprietary turnkey solution we've been paying for this whole time is enshitifying! Subscription models, mandatory cloud services, more and steeper fees!" "Open source tools are still a thing, you know." "Yeah but we've spent a decade telling an entire generation of talent to learn the proprietary stuff so it's hard to migrate, and we didn't contribute any code or money to FOSS projects this whole time so it still isn't up to snuff."
Well I guess you can slide over to Unreal and kick that can down the road a bit waiting for Epic Games to enshitify their product as well, you can use and contribute to Godot, you can develop your own in-house engine, or you can keep taking it up the ass from Unity.
Just let me ask this: If even a few smaller games, something like Unrailed or Papers Please, used Godot and contributed what they paid to Unity to the Godot team...where would the engine be today?