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While technically it gives you four additional years, it is a rather pricey option that the average user will not be willing to pay.
And i suspect Valve will terminate support for Windows 10 in about 2028 if Windows 7 is takes as a baseline.
I recommend you look for alternatives.
The important part for gamers is LTSC is a security thing, not a feature thing.
If Nvidia/AMD drops OS driver support (as an example, thats a long time from now) then microsoft cant help you with gaming. Youre stuck on the last rev, or at best microsoft drivers.
If the windows 12 kernel is built around TPM2.0+ security functions then services like steam, your bank webpage, chrome/edge itself will have moved on too. TPM you have to remember is an international standard ISO/IEC 11889. Its possible that it becomes an actual minimum requirment (as in legally required) for some services (No doubt financial related stuff).
Im not some seer, I personally stay on the newest versions and occasional dabble into the windows betas for my gaming computer. Mostly I want to stay forward looking for the ecosystems, thats pretty much how i do it.