My wife and kids have accounts. I think it is super important kids become familiar with a password manager and using it from the day they first log online.
Even though I have the technical know-how on how to run keepassxc and other open source solutions like BitWarden to keep them in sync my wife and kids don't. 1Password for Families manages all the infra and the security model which frees up my time. And I'm happy to pay them to do that too.
Sure, we all know of the mis-steps that 1Password has done however they have listened (mostly) to their clients and implemented solutions accordingly. They are turning their strategy to passkeys which is the future and leading the way like this shows innovation.
And not only do I use them to store passwords but also notes, passports, licenses, server creds, crypto wallets phrases and even PINS for the myriad of physical locks at my workplace.
I have a Visionary Protonmail membership and they have given me access to their ProtonPass offering. It looks good so far, however, are years behind 1Password. I'm sure they will catch up over time and I will certainly consider it in the future yet at this moment they are not quote there yet.
I use bitwarden because of its convenience and easy synchronization between devices. No matter who says what, but you get very used to it and it's very hard to give up on the cloud.
So I started using keepass in parallel. Maybe someday I will switch over to it completely.
Important points to retain regarding this subject:
Always use a password manager (bitwarden, 1password, keepassxc, pass, ... your choice)
Always generate long and random passwords.
Have secure backups of your password db.
Require a second factor, when possible.
For your bitcoin savings, use an hardware wallet or a multisig wallet.
With this in mind, the specific products/apps are not that important. Nevertheless, I find it preferable to use solutions were you don't have to rely on a 3rd party.
Bitwarden coupled with a Yubikey for the management of the master password. When I do a long touch on the Yubikey it enters the master password which is quite handy.
Locally I also use Seahorse, the password manager on Gnome. But as most of the time I had to use it on the command line I plan to replace it with something like gopass.
I was a 1Password customer for nearly a decade. The mobile and desktop apps were solid, the extension worked, and the customer service was solid.
In the last few years, though, 1Password has started to decline. The recent move to version 8 -- a horrendous downgrade from 7 -- was the final straw.
I dropped 1Password and jumped to Bitwarden. I don't regret the decision. There are some small pain points that 1P does better -- autofilling, syncing, and saving new entries -- but, for $10 a year, Bitwarden worked out well. Bonus: the entire codebase is open source?
Regardless, using a password manager to create unique passwords for each account is always a smart move.