My rule for cameras is that I can collect them as long as they work and get used. I don't want shelf queens. I have too many 35mm SLRs, so even though I'm interested in owning at least another Olympus and probably a Minolta as well, I likely won't pick any up unless some kind of ridiculously good deal comes along. I now have 7 35mm SLRs, and I do use all of them, but some are favorites and some are more in the "loaner" category at this point
I've had a few 35mm cameras I really hated. I lived in Russia for 2 years back in about 2011-2013, so I had a phase where I got really interested in old Soviet cameras. Tried the Zorki C (a clone of some Leica or another). It had the cool factor. Looked really nice, the collapsible Industar 50mm lens was fascinating. I wanted to love it. But I'm just not a rangefinder guy. The lens rendering was really nothing special. And loading that camera was the stuff of nightmares. Cutting in a weird custom leader shape, loading from the bottom... not for me. I gave it away.
Several years ago when point & shoot cameras were skyrocketing in popularity and price, I wondered what all the hype was about and picked up a Pentax Espio of some sort. It was slow, the lens was unimpressive, and the motorized zoom/autofocus sounded like C-3PO having a colonoscopy. After 2 rolls I sold it.
Not far back, I wanted a "backpacking" camera that I could rely on but was super light and compact, so I picked up an Olympus XA. Those things are really great cameras, but I just can't do the kind of photography I like to do when I locked into 35mm focal length with a minimum focusing distance of nearly 3 feet. Wasn't a good fit, so I sold it. I'll carry the extra weight of one of my Olympus 35mm SLRs. They're small and the lenses are small, and the quality is outstanding.