I wouldn't trade my time at Hampshire for the world. Rating or highly because if it's the right fit, it will change your life. (Also to offset some of the right-wing review bombings of people who've never even gone here) If you want to go to Hampshire though, you really need to ask yourself: Do you have what it takes to motivate yourself when you have no restrictions?
This college is EXPENSIVE. EX. PEN. SIVE. Seeing the current government situation, I don't see that changing, either. During my four years, I'd often look at my classmates and realize that there were 2 kinds of students who go here: Intelligent, hard working individuals making real changes getting the best educational experience for experimental minds that they could hope to get, OR spoiled rich kids and people so depressed and miserable that they could not bring themselves to do any work whatsoever, burning 70k+ every year just to fail classes because they liked the sound of a no testing school on paper. If it's the depression, I'd recommend taking time away, 70k is WAY too much to pay for an experience you're not enjoying. But there will always be people here who have never felt the fear of the real world and grift it in the most expensive college in the area because it's marginally easier, and that's a bit demoralizing for those of us who do have to work. Still, if you are a passionate person, if you want school to work with you on projects instead of against you, if you hate school because there's something you'd RATHER be working towards, not because you think effort is too hard to sum up ever, this is time and money well spent. (Also, they have some great scholarships that really helped me!)
Hampshire has a unique set of challenges, but no more or less than other colleges. You trade fraternities and high assault rates for disorganized management and an occasionally volatile set of peers (always bound to happen on small campuses that collect people with strong morals.) Its structure asks you to apply yourself. If you don't apply yourself to your studies, your community, your values, you are simply wasting your time and money. If you *do* apply yourself, getting involved in advocacy, independent studies, clubs, learning collectives, you will be getting the chance to learn life skills by doing in an environment which is still safe to fail in. I consider that infinitely more valuable than studying for tests.
If you feel like you belong at Hampshire, here's advice from a very proud alum and former RA: if you need help? Don't stop asking people until you GET IT. Staff on this campus want to help you, ALWAYS, but they're such a mess and so overworked it might take some effort to find the right people to help you in the way you need. You're paying them to be there. You are OWED that support, and then you can direct other people to it later.
Also, if you read this far, check out my Div III project online! It's a comic/prose hybrid novel about the AIDS crisis in Last Vegas, called Dirty Vegas Dogs!