Can I ask what’s intuitive about a UX that hides all functionality behind cryptic commands that require reading the mind of the person who made them to know which three letters correspond to the acronym of the command you’re trying to run?
Once you are familiar with it, it is easy to continue using, and much faster than fumbling around in a GUI trying to find the magic button.
For most commands it's also easy to find the necessary subcommand via man or -h or whatever. The other big thing is scriptability, there's a number of things I find myself doing a few times a day, I can throw that in a script (about a minute to do for most of them) and now they take .5 seconds to do, versus waiting for a GUI to load/run -- Plus, now it's my stupid 3 letter acronym I need to remember :P .
I can work with Windows, but I hate every second of it. Meanwhile, Linux/BSD is intuitive and easy to get going.
Almost like what tools you know impact what you find easy.