Soldar,
Have you gotten your Arduino UNO R3 yet?
Have you played with it yet?
I am curious.
I think you made a good choice. I got an authentic Arduino UNO 3 about 12 years ago as part of a Make ultimate pack. Most of that stuff I did not use. I still use the solderless breadboard and the jumper wires from it. However, I could have done without it. Or gotten the cheaper pack.
I do like the Arduino Nano better because it fits on a solderless breadboard. Once your design works, build on a solderable breadboard that works like a solderless breadboard with the same number of points. However, there are these Arduino Nano sockets you can buy to plug your Nano in. Here is a description you can search: Nano Controller Terminal Adapter Expansion Board Nano IO Shield Simple Extension Plate for Arduino Nano AVR ATMEGA328P. I use this so you can unplug it to make an update to your Nano's sketch.
Blink is good to start with especially since it is already on the Arduino I got. The tutorial for getting started at Arduino.cc is good. And the Arduino IDE is good too. Sure, it is not as good as Eclipse of Visual Studio for an IDE, but it works. One of things I did after getting Blink to upload and work was to modify the sketch (program) to blink faster or slower or some kind of pattern using the delay function. This is to prove changes I make are being uploaded successfully.
And when you are ready, you can try other microcontrollers like ESP32 and programming languages like assembly, C, C++, Python, Rust, etc.