You all know I love my electric stuff... So I have to jump in.
I have 2 acres, with a bunch of trees along 2 of the sides, and a 170-foot driveway, FWIW.
When I bought this place, I started in mostly electric as I didn't want to bother maintaining a million little engines. The exception is my lawn tractor - Even now, there's not a lot that's up to the job. There is a Ryobi 54" zero turn that would take care of the mowing (and my neighbor uses the 42" successfully, also 2 acres) but I also have a snowblower and a bagger, and there's no bagger for the Ryobi. Mean Green and some others make electric zero turns that are more than up to the task of mowing, but to my knowledge there aren't really any tractors that are large enough but still affordable to tackle the lawn & snow tasks.
Toro: I did buy a Toro walk-behind snowblower, and it was really nice - I could adjust chute direction and height from behind, it can take three batteries, it had all the bells and whistles like heated grips, it was tougher (ie metal) than a lot of the electric ones, and I figured that since it was mostly identical to one of their higher end gas models it'd be easy to get parts for. It could do my driveway at least twice without recharging. It was a little weird in that it was clearly just a converted gas model, so the motor would start turning as soon as you turned it on, and it just used one motor with transmissions for self propelling and auger, but it worked pretty well for what it was. However, I returned it because it turns out that I just don't like walk-behind snowblowers. This was the first I'd ever had, and my driveway isn't in the best of shape so I found that I was having to wrestle this thing around enough that my back would ache just as much as if I'd simply shoveled it. If you're in a walk-behind snowblower situation, Toro is good.
Ryobi: I had one of their mowers briefly after we bought a play set for the kids a few years ago. It worked once, but quit the second time I used it - Just refused to do anything, and it was clearly not geared towards user maintenance. Back to the store. I also do have a small handheld trimmer that works.
Ego: I don't have any, but my dad has several of their tools and likes them. I also know a LOT of other people who have them, and I've not heard of any Ego users being dissatisfied.
And for most of my stuff, I have
Black & Decker 20V Max. Uncharacteristically, I did not research the living hell out of it before I started buying tools - I just grabbed a weed whacker/edger combo on a whim at the store. I've since added pole saw, chainsaw, leaf blower, hedge trimmer, flashlight, circular saw, tire inflator, vacuum, and the Matrix driver which is quite cool - It lets you swap attachments to a drill-ish body and reuse one motor for multiple tools. For that, I have the drill, impact driver, jigsaw, and oscillating tool. I also have 7 total batteries now, which is definitely more than I need, and I never buy anything but a bare tool any more. The oldest tools and batteries are 10 years old. None of the tools has ever failed in any way. I have one battery that seemed like it failed, but after I marked it and charged it and used it a few times, so far it's holding up OK again.
While B&D is good, I do feel like Ryobi has more tools available. If I were to start over, I'd look hard at Ryobi just because they seem to have more tools than anyone else. Milwaukee has a ton of tools and their quality is excellent, but $$$$.
I will never understand the move away from user-replaceable batteries in consumer electronics.
Uh... I've never come across a battery powered tool that didn't use detachable batteries. It wouldn't make any sense not to be able to swap batteries from tool to tool, nor swapping batteries to keep working on one tool.
On the other hand, I do need to wear earplugs when I use all of those. I can understand the appeal of the electrics, but they’re not cheaper to buy and probably not cheaper to operate… so I’m not seeing a compelling case for them.
The cost difference wouldn't be compelling as it is with an EV. To me, it's the difference in maintenance that's compelling. It's literally zero maintenance other than the stuff that's true for any tool (sharpening blades/chains, replacing string on the trimmer, oiling chainsaw chains, etc). No carbs, no gas, no oil, no spark plugs, no muss, no fuss.
This thread has convinced me to dip into the electric yard equipment space at my next need. Three years ago I was all set to buy electric mower and a guy at Home Depot talked me out of it. He said he's seen way too many electric mowers returned b/c they're not cutting it.
Home Depot pushes Ryobi pretty hard, and like I said above, I had to return my Ryobi mower and I did not pick up another. When I googled the issue I was having, it sounded like maybe the electric push mowers Ryobi made at the time (2020) had poor quality control. Hopefully it's better now.