Not really. It did--together with internet in general--shift my attitude towards religion, however. I went from fedora-type atheism in my early teens to having a utilitarian attitude towards it in my early twenties, in the sense that while I didn't believe any of it, I considered religion a net-positive that society needed more of. Now I've settled in the middle where I still retain respect for genuine devotion and commitment to the faith, while also taking a far more pessimistic view of religion's viability in the face of turbo-modernity. This reassessment had been driven both by the overall decreasing religiosity across the globe as well as the way it manifests in the younger cohorts that still claim adherence to it. In particular, I've developed intense disdain for people feigning belief in transparent service of some other idol or motivation of theirs. Typically personal gain, self-discipline, partaking in a "community", laundering their own psychosexual complexes, or some flavor of political ideology (whether left or right).
At least on the internet, it became obvious that pretentious LARPers and nominal adherents (e.g. "cultural" Christians) far outnumbers true believers. This in turn convinced me that I overestimated the societal utility of religion in the absence of regressing to a more primitive mode of living such as the Amish or Haredim, and I do not consider either to be a preferable alternative to modern living despite all of its ills.