I was given a 3 month free subscription to Qobuz with my purchase of Audirvana+ and it works very well, sounds extremely good. There are many playlists for one to explore. When searching for stuff by some legendary artist however, say Elvis, Nat or Frank, you will get a lot of "noise" in the results in the form of useless compilations, best offs and such, that make it impossible to find the good stuff if you don't know the precise title, and I'm not sure why Qobuz, or any other service, would include those, other than boosting their library counts.
On the go, Qobuz works well within the USB Audio Player Android app, but streaming will freeze at some points in my commute unless I chose a lower resolution than 16/44 i.e. a subscription cheaper than the 20 CHF or $ / mth one would be enough in that use case, and 4G works pretty well in Switzerland. But then, for home, I'd like to have the premium subscription. But for what? for 1 hour on weekends, at most, where I can sit and enjoy some music. I'm unable to work and listen to music, and if I could, I'm not sure I would use a streaming service over a choice of thousands of Internet radios.
So to me, a music service subscription is almost pointless. I could see being a Qobuz subscriber on and off, for just one month when I feel in the mood to explore some new music; then again, there's YouTube. That's another problem I have: a lot of the new music, or the old music I was curious about, I just don't like enough to buy. For the remainder, a meager list of a dozen must-have titles or so gleaned from my 3 month free subscription, I can buy the CDs for cheap or even borrow at the public library.
I like Qobuz's service for buying music in that you get the choice of several formats. It proved very useful once when I bought an album that sounded awful in FLAC format; as their rep was being a d*ck about it claiming it was only my ears and his audiophile ears knew better, it occured to me to dowload the uncompressed WAV, and converting it to FLAC myself using dbPowerAmp, which worked. So their file was bad and they wouldn't admit it, or refund me, but to their credit having a choice of several formats proved an extremely useful feature. THAT BEING SAID, CDs can be bought online here typically for 30% less (sometimes even less) than the standard Qobuz CD format price. It's not that I'm on a very strict budget, but we do have a family budget and priorities, and my wife and I tend to mercilessly cut or avoid expenses that are not fully justified.