That's probably not the right place to ask that, but I have just discovered golfing, and in the past few days, I have been flooded with a lot of new "golfing" languages. Even though I like golfing in C, I would like to learn a golfing language. That's probably opinion based, but what are the ones worth taking a look at?
Vyxal's probably easier to transition to from other languages as it's quite intuitive and contains a lot of concepts from practical languages, such as if statements, loops, functions etc
@LucasEmanuelGenova if you decide to learn jelly, my one tip for you is to try not to intuit too much, and just learn it as a system of rules (because that's what it is)
@RedwolfPrograms Tacit for Jelly, stack based for Vyxal, and Husk's somewhat functional I think (I know it's Haskell based, but haven't looked into it much)
If you're looking for a language with a unique paradigm, I recommend Brachylog. If you're looking for a language with a familiar paradigm, I recommend Pip.* (* very biased)