Sigh. Anyone who compares Denver traffic to Atlanta, Boston etc clearly hasn't driven here very much. Is there traffic? Yes, it's a major metropolitan area with only ONE main North/South and ONE main East/West freeway. That said, the traffic here is NOWHERE near that of much larger cities like Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, etc, etc, etc.
I grew up here as a little boy, then lived in Vail after college, then moved back here in 2004. Has it become more expensive to buy a house? Yes! However that's also the case in any other desirable area of the country. If you compare the housing costs here to those in rural Iowa, you're going to be shocked, but that's not a valid comparison. If you compare them to other desirable areas, particularly those on the coasts, you'll find Denver is actually cheaper.
Covid is making the outdoors more crowded. Since there's less open, those that used to hang out in town and go to bars, shows etc are deciding to go camping, hiking, etc. Because of that the bike trails and other things are getting impacted negatively. I find myself getting on the bike trails much earlier on a weekend to try and avoid crowds. I've always driven up to ski on a Thursday afternoon and come home Saturday afternoon. Traffic those days is about the same and unless there's an epic powder day I don't find the lift lines at Vail to be long at all. Most of the time I ski right onto the chair, even with Covid.
If you go up to the lift ticket window you're going to pay. A lot. However when I moved out here in 92-93 a season pass for Vail/Beaver Creek was $825 and was restricted, you couldn't use it on holidays. A full Epic pass, which covers a TON of ski resorts and has NO black out dates is about the same amount. So anyone who says skiing is expensive, or that it was way cheaper back in the day isn't really correct.
Weather here is pretty awesome, we get over 300 days of sunshine a year. When it snows it hangs around for a few days and is gone. They do a great job with snow removal here. Winter is generally mild temperatures, maybe a week or two of single digits but mostly its around 30-40F.
The foodie scene here has gotten a lot better, decent choices of ethnic food. Still not up to the level of a real metro area like Chicago or LA but pretty good. I'd say this is still more of a steakhouse kind of town than anything else though.
Plenty of good neighborhoods with good schools here. Depending on where you want to live and how much land you want to have you can spend anywhere from $600k to multi millions. Boulder is a very cool community but they've had "no growth" laws on the books for decades. That's created an artificial housing market there and you pay more. You also pay more because it's a college town and right up against the Flatirons with easy access to trails. It's also the most left leaning community in the state and it shows. Just like Colorado Springs is the most right leaning community and it shows there.
Plenty of good tracks here. Within 2 hours of me are High Plains Raceway, Pike Peak Int'l Raceway and Pueblo Motorsports Park. SCCA, BMWCCA and PCA all have very active auto-x programs and all the Clubs do track days along with NASA. You can go to the track pretty much any weekend on season here and the season runs from April through October. There are social car events too, plenty of meet and greets, shows, etc, etc.
If you like the outdoors this is still a good place to come. Just try not to drive up the hill on friday after work and come back on sunday afternoon. Property is going to cost significantly more than Wisconsin I suspect but if you're ok with that, you're going to be happy. I like it here, all my wife's family live 10 minutes from us. I like mtn biking and skiing, dual sport riding my moto and track driving. All that is easily done here. The summers can get a bit hot for me but that's about it. Really the only place I'd move to would be back home to San Diego (La Jolla or around it specifically) but I can't pull that off $$$ wise...