It is like saying 'I want to take up cycling as a sport'.
You can pop down your local big-box store and buy a $100 bike and aseemble it. It will have two wheels and a handlebar just like any other bike. You will be able to ride down to the local store on it, on nice paved roads.
But if you really want to have a bike which will take you places, down tracks and trails you don't even know about yet, and will not break down and leave you stranded then move to a good known brand for a specialist retailer.
How many hours do you want to be stranded, figuring things out complex issues on your own, because of lack of documentation and as nobody (not even Google) can offer you meaningful advice?
A nice FPGA board is a pleasure to work with, and allows you to focus on your learning and experimenting, not trying to get the blasted thing just to accept a bit stream, clock properly, or work out that your LEDs are active low.
I recommend you find the resources you want to use to learn (PDFs, courses, YouTube subs) then get the board they use.