@Remington92 should be married and back from the honeymoon at this point. Congratulations!
Now back to the knife-nerdery. I started buying good knives my freshman year in college. 40+ years later, I still own about half of those, yet I keep buying and trying new things. About 15 stay in the kitchen for regular use -- the rest go to our guest house, the camping kit, or become gifts for relatives and friends.
My first real knife was a 10" carbon steel Dexter (on sale when NSF briefly mandated stainless in commercial kitchens). I still use it.
Filled out my collection with ten Henckels 4 Stars when I was in Germany. The exchange rate was crazy good -- paid $22 for a 10" chefs, which was $80 here at the time.
Bought a hand-forged Warikomi Santoku when I was in Japan -- still one of the best blades I've ever held or used. Aogami carbon steel wrapped in hammered stainless.
I also own Shun and Global knives, which are great for certain tasks.
What matters in a knife is
1. Shape
2. Grind
3. Steel
In that order
The best fanciest steel in an unfortunate shape or bad grind is worthless.
This is crazy important, and unfortunately not well understood (even by many working chefs).
You can also piece together a set of Japanese knives. This is my new thing. The issue is they aren't as durable or robust as the European steels so be warned.
Japanese shapes (or variations of them) using newer steels and mass-market construction can be quite durable. Over the past four years, I have bought half a dozen of
these that have ended up displacing some of our old favorites (while costing 50-80% less).
If you don't already own one, you really, really need to try a decent Nakiri. Sold as a vegetable knife, but I also find it to be the best way to slice meat I've experienced.
I grew up around Cutco and every middle aged white lady in my area swears by them. I'm honestly not that impressed. They aren't necessarily bad but they aren't great either.
Ditto for me. Well-made and very durable, but I find the shapes to be somewhat dated and uninspiring.
Steak knives do not need to be expensive. Grabbed a couple of sets of
these on sale awhile back and retired three other sets we had either bought or inherited over the years.