>>12551183It's possible Uni will make you have to learn stuff that you don't find as interesting and so you will struggle to memorise or read troves of not so interesting stuff.
This all depends on how interesting you find a subject. Obviously if you love a subject to death, no matter what sub-subject, then it matters not and Uni should be enjoyable.
If you are coming from a, 'I love every single bit of my subject to death' angle, then University will be handy from a learning point of view because it can give a nice structure and flow to learning. It would save you from having to work out, 'where next is the unlearnt material necessary to the subject.'.
Also if you are coming from that angle I mentioned, then obviously pairing University learning paths with your own free time learning is simply a double whammy to learning that any die hard learner lover would want.
If you are talking about whether the money is worth that learning structure (from said angle) I would say yes, IF you have spare cash to devote to the pure learning cause.
So two variables, how much do you love said subject and how much cash have you got to devote to learning?