I like it. Found a site reviewing the 'best 9 free video editing programs'. They listed this one as the best, but hardest to use. It was the only one that supported multiple camera shots. We had multiple people filming the same stuff from different angles, so I wanted that.
It was free to download and didn't take long. Installed easy. Fired it up. Had no idea where to start. Googled "Lightworks pip". Found a Youtube tutorial on how to do it. VERY simple. So the very first thing I did was start building a video with pip. Less than 5 minutes and I had it working. Needed to do some other stuff. Lightworks cut clip. Lightworks fade to black. Lightworks etc. Youtube videos or easy to follow forum answers. So, it might be 'hard to use', but with all the video tutorials, it was VERY easy to use.
My first video had picture in picture, changing camera angles, various audio sources (I would use which ever camera was picking up the best audio, or the one that captured the 'scene' best), using transitions, etc. Lots of cool stuff. Very easy to do.
When I went to export it as a complete video, that's where I found that the free version was missing stuff. I couldn't export in 1080p. I was limited to 720p. Oh well. It built the final product at about 2.5x speed. 5 minute video took about 2 minutes. Looks crisp and audio matched up with video. Awesome.
There were a bunch of other features that were only in pro, but I wasn't missing them for what I was doing. However, if I wanted the pro version, I could have it for $8/month, $90/year or $279/lifetime. I thought that was pretty cool. IF I needed some pro features, I'm not locked into the full purchase price. I can 'rent it' for the project I'm working on.
So, ya. Home movie editing way cooler than MS Movie Maker.