Yeah, there are kids with college-educated parents being channeled straight to college by peer or parental pressure, sometimes just inadvertent parental pressure, who would benefit from exploring other options for at least a while (which can turn into forever, or a very focused degree plan). Then other kids without such parents who would love college and benefit greatly from it, and their parents are supportive, but lack the financial resources and direct knowledge to make it work for their kid.
Obviously these are difficult problems at a societal level. But to the extent we can help any specific kids or parents better navigate all that, there are worse things you can do within an online hobby.
And of course it is also fine to help highly resourced families with kids excited about college as a next step explore more options too. But maybe a less pressing need, because again the evidence suggests such kids from such families are very likely to get what they want out of college. Because they are going to end up somewhere good for them, and their outcomes just aren’t that sensitive to exactly where.