So here’s the deal with Full Sail.
If you read through their course listings and are interested in the courses they offer (exactly what they offer, no reading between the lines), and are okay with the prices - it’s alright for learning things. However, Full Sail suffers from the same problems that places like ITT Tech and DeVry do, their credits transfer to basically no other schools. You cannot go to Full Sail for 3 years and transfer to, for example UC Santa Barbara, The Ohio University, or Harvard. Sure you could go to those schools, but your 3 years are gone - they are not transferring with you. The degree thus is really only going to get you past barriers in places where you’re sorted out by a computer. If having a degree is a hard and fast rule and the computer/HR person will toss you out without any degree of any kind, that’s when a Full Sail type degree helps you.
The only other caveat of places like Full Sail are that some of the courses are a little bit… hopeful let’s say. For example a “Game Designer” degree is probably not going to get you a job as a game designer, these are people who have worked in the industry for a long time and have shipping titles - it’s a lot more than anything you’re going to learn in a school (ANY school). By the same token, you have to remember that just because you might have a degree in “Game Design” or “Character Animation/Rigging” or whatever - you’re not guarenteed those jobs (the same way you aren’t guarenteed a job as a doctor just because you graduated from medical school.)
A lot of the dissatisfaction with these for-profit schools is a disconnect between expectations and results. Don’t believe the hype in their commercials, that’s exactly what they are - commercials. Are they outright a scam? No, but the people who will benefit from them need to be discerning and informed consumers and know what they’re getting into and what they expect to get out of it.