Has anything changed? PGP is literally thirty years old now, and I'm not aware of any significant changes to either the protocol or to the support landscape.
That's a bad thing. PGP has some really awful usability problems which have never been addressed. The paper "Why Johnny Can't Encrypt" described some of these issues in 1999, and a series of followups ("Why Johnny Still Can't Encrypt", "Why Johnny Still, Still Can't Encrypt"...) have come out over the years confirming that it still hasn't improved.
Someone should carry out a study where they test whether people can create a ProtonMail account and send an email from it (with a control group trying to do the same using Gmail). They could title the resulting research paper "Why Johnny Can Now Encrypt".
I don't know of any tests specifically for ProtonMail, but "Why Johnny Still, Still Can't Encrypt" tested the usability of another in-browser PGP interface and found it lacking.
And it still involves some significant trade-offs in terms of functionality: Potentially worse (spam) filtering and no full-text search unless you keep a full local copy of your mails around (which is rather unreasonable on a phone and impossible with webmail).
And those trade-offs are more or less fundamental if you want to access your mail from multiple devices, but at the same time don't want to trust your server to handle decrypted mails.