@Hydrotherapy88
If you want a good all around boat. Jet boats are where it's at IMO. They are easy to maintain, easy to operate and generally easy to live with. The low profile driveline means they have cool layouts that are super family friendly. The center consoles from Scarab and Yamaha look really interesting and make great family/fishing boats (way better than the old "Fish and Ski" boats of the '90's). I think there are a ton of great reasons to own a jetboat.
However, there are some downsides.
They aren't great if you're in an area with a lot of seaweed, especially SeaDoos. No cleanout port on the SeaDoos and Scarabs makes cleaning a clogged jet a PIA. I'm on season 6 in midwest lakes and rivers and only cleaned out like 3-4 times over the 220-ish hours we have on the boat.
They aren't great if you want a dedicated surf boat. By nature they're light and don't displace much water, so the wakes have to be synthesized with ballast, wake shapers, and other devices. They can be made to surf, but it's more workaround than it is right tool for the job.
Most are loud at cruise. Jet drive units on family boats typically runner smaller higher revving engines, and the "buzz" from that is hard to not notice. Most dedicated wake boats have well insulated engine compartments, and large V8's with underwater exhaust. They're very quiet at cruise and under heavy load (like surfing). This is totally a perception thing as the total dB of the boat is VERY similar, it's a higher pitch and some people don't like it.
My biggest suggestion.....Find an owner near you and get a test ride one afternoon. Throw them some cash for drinks and lunch supplies and get a test ride on one. If you're in the midwest, the Lake Shelbyville meetup is next weekend. Show up there (announced of course), and I promise you'll get a good spectrum of owners, and some honest in person feedback on what makes them good and bad boats.