>>106280028Depends on where you want to live.
I haven't spent much time in eastern Canada but I hear it's culturally similar to the less urban parts of the UK. It's also super affordable but there isn't a lot of job growth.
If you go to Quebec you're going to be surrounded by people who speak french as a first language except if you're living in certain parts of Montreal. Montreal is actually where I'm living now since it's super cheap and I want to learn french without being constantly immersed in it.
The prairies can get really cold, but there are a lot of jobs out west that pay well and don't require a lot of education. The only real cities though are Calgary, which is boring as hell, and Edmonton.
BC is the scenic province, it's also probably the most socially liberal one. The only real city is Vancouver which is expensive.
Ontario is the last part of Canada. The north is relatively poor and rural, lots of mining and resource based jobs. Down south is where the big cities like Ottawa and Toronto are. Ottawa is the capital so there are lots of civil servants and government building, it's very bilingual.
Toronto is Canada's biggest city and its cultural, artistic, economic, and intellectual centre. Everyone from outside the city hates on it and calls it boring, but it is actually great. There are stricter rules and regulations about alcohol and clubs then most big cities but there's still a thriving social scene. A new subway line was just opened, more buses have been put on the street and the routes have been better organized so congestion is less of a problem then it used to be. The biggest downside is that it is also pretty expensive and there it's difficult to even find an apartment.
Is there anything else you want to know?