I guess I'm some kind of weirdo or something. I've been bottling, and honestly don't really mind the whole process. Been keeping an eye out on CL for a keg setup, and bought one yesterday. But honestly, I'm not really looking forward to using it. It's only a single keg mini fridge and I'm still trying to figure out how I'd want to configure things. I'm definitely going to replace the lines, would like to get a good faucet, and would like to add a manifold so I can at least have a line to carb a second keg outside the fridge. Bottling has been working fine for me, I'm just still trying to figure out why I need to keg. I might give it a try, or I might sell it, not sure yet.
Give it a try for a while. I didn't hate bottling, but it also wasn't my favorite. I started kegging after 2 years of bottling and love it. Been kegging for 3 years now. Yes, it's convenient only cleaning and filling one vessel. And it's fun pouring your own draft beer at home. But the best part of kegging for me is the control I have over carbonation. I don't have the random over or under carbonated beers anymore like I always got when bottling. And that was properly dissolving priming sugar and mixing, etc.
Of course there's a cost to all of it that can be a little steep. Especially if (when) you get carried away with it, which you will. I started with a used fridge, 6 craigslist kegs and 4 used, free chrome faucets and a single regulator. Within a few months, I ordered a new taprite 4 regulator secondary manifold setup, 4 perlick 630ss and new stainless shanks, as well as 4 more craigslist kegs. But then there's the cost of ball (or pin) lock connectors (2 per tap), 15 - 20 ft of beer line for each faucet, swivel connectors, hose clamps, new o-rings for kegs, co2 refills, more co2 refills when chasing down the leak that leaves your first tank empty, etc. So you get an extra co2 tank for a backup. Then, you gotta get the kegged beer into bottles for a competition or to bring somewhere, so you look at a beergun (another $100 ish), and maybe a growler filler too.
Oh yeah, don't forget about the hours of trying to figure out why your kegged beer is really foamy but isn't carbonated. The first thing you try in this situation is turning the pressure down to serve, then turning it back up. You'll get sick of chasing the carbonation so you might be tempted to settle with under carbonated beer serving at like 6 psi. Then you post here again asking why the beer is still flat or foamy. Someone will tell you that you HAVE to by new flow control faucets to fix the foam, but you've already spent $40 each on new perlick 630ss. So, as a last resort you try using mikesoltys.com line length calculator and get new 15-20 ft beer lines to replace the 5 ft ones that came with your "kit", or that the LHBS told you would be sufficient. At that point, you'll start to enjoy drinking your properly carbonated, kegged draft beer at home.
The point is: kegging is great and I wouldn't go back to just bottling, but be careful, it's a very slippery (expensive) slove.