not really. eventually a cousin moved in with me, but that was solely for his benefit not mine.
first 6 months I lived with family and had a 2hr commute. Worked in Midtown lived in Powder Springs, the far side.
next 6 months I moved in town, by myself, to "Sandy Springs", which is theoretically a nice area, and 8 miles from work, commute was still at least an hour and a half. my apartment wasn't nice, cops were outside my building at least once a week, stopped waking up to the flashing lights.
bought my first car, used, while there, mostly off of savings I inherited from dead relatives, and entered my peanut butter and sometimes jelly phase. eventually figured out bagged salads, and canned soups were cheap too. I think rent was like 500 or 600 a month. I was making about 30k then.
for the next 6-7 years, I lived in a studio apartment that was about 1k a month, and took the train to work. during this time health insurance went from 50 bucks a month to about 300 thanks to ACA, that was the roughest period because there was no way for me to control or mitigate that. until I moved out in March 2020 (anyone remember what was going on then?) when rent had gone up to 2k a month. i went from making 40k a year there to about 70k when I left. Finally got internet a year or two after moving into that apartment, and eventually could afford to regularly buy actual non-deli-meat.
after that I moved into a 2 bedroom, was paying about 1.8k, and my cousin moved in shortly after because he got a job in the area. was further away from my job, but near a train station. we were in a latino complex. solo gringos.
when I bought the house, cousin came with until the missus moved in. I kept his "rent" well below market rate. he was shocked and grateful when he moved out and saw how much rent was. he is paying more than 2x as much for renting one bedroom in a split up house, much further from work. he told me when he moved out he wouldn't have been able to afford a place on his own when he first moved in. his work is blue collar warehouse stuff. even in the 'burbs his options for living were extremely limited.
I never had student loans, so that is one thing that really helped me, but wasn't the case for most my age.