I’m twice your age and I have travelled a bit, and hunted a lot of neat places. I’ve chased the NA 29 (Canada, Mexico, USA, Greenland) Dangerous 7 and some neat others (Cameroon, Zimbabwe, Namibia, South Africa) and Hunted Argentina and Australia - not all hunts have been successful in killing an animal, or logistics, guides etc. I still have a few more places to go- Mid-Asia mountain hunts, maybe NZ, and many hunts I want to go back and do again…
Based on your limited information what seems like the most important thing you are missing is
personal hunting experience. The best way to do that is learn how to hunt DIY. And also if you want difficult do it with a
bow! as any true bowhunter would say it’s too easy with a rifle

(I am an equal opportunity hunter and probably go 50/50 bow / rifle depending on hunt and odds of success- some hunts truly are super easy with a rifle and some international hunts and guided ones are just about paying the money… cheapens the experience for me)
The most satisfying hunts I had took the most effort. A thing I notice a lot of eastern hunters severely lack is Backpacking ability and skills to break down and pack meat.
Some key hunts to do DIY and pack in, all accessible tags and physical-
Bowhunt September Elk in the rut
Kill a mature mule deer (Aug archery in Velvet or Rifle in Oct-Nov)
A trip that changed my life was a DIY Summer Archery Kodiak Sitka Blacktail deer, and salmon/ocean fishing when I was 30) It opened my eyes to all the possibilities and validated my abilities, so much that I ended up moving to Alaska. (I love the summer on Kodiak, and easier to drop camp and salmon running)
At this point in your life use your money to Buy Time for personal growth and skills as a hunter and gear. You will have plenty of options later to use money to pay for other hunts or access that will mean more to you once you learn what you can do personally