I recently started picking locks for fun. I started out with bobby pins and a crappy 5$ padlock I bought for other reasons at my local convenience store. I then found it so rewarding to feel the lock open that I went ahead and bought a professional set of 32 lockpicks (Klom, the ones with green rubber handles, google "NO:KL-307") and scoured my house for padlocks. Let's just say it gets pretty boring during the winters here in sweden.
Long story short: I have now picked open ~20 different padlocks in less than 2 days and I feel as if I have run out of challenges. I can't feel proud about it since most of the locks open within a minute with some raking, other harder locks (ABUS N 65/40 refuses to be raked) I wiggle around a bit until I feel what pins produce a response in the torsion wrench, then "precision-wiggle" some more on the remaining 2-3 pins until it opens.
By far the most annoying one to pick (Aside from my GeGe front-door lock which atleast made me feel slightly safe for about 45 minutes) was the aforementioned ABUS N65/40, 3 pins gave me no feedback, and one gave me a false 10degree give and then proceeded to stop there until I reset the pins. Probably one of those spools. However I can now open it and all other tricky ones in less than 5 seconds every time when I know the pins, so that's non-rewarding. And I don't want to perfect my technique on my front door lock, some illusions of safety are best left unshattered.
Besides realising that padlocks are basically ornamental in nature to even the most undedicated thief, I don't know what else to learn from them. Where do I go from here?
Are they this easy, and should I feel any accomplishment for being able to open them instantly after a short while? I mean no lock is alike, and had I had another N65/40, would the same technique work on it after slight modifications to fit the new pin-order? I can't really afford to buy a ton of locks simply to pick them

What do I do? Does anyone have tips on locks to try and beat? Since I live in Sweden many American locks may be unavailable to me, but name the ones that stand out to you! I've still got to live through another 2 months of dull winter!
I should also thank you all on this forum, a lot of threads here have given me much useful information on picks and techniques!
PS: If you (someone as new as I am to this) are really interested in taking your lockpicking to another level and are unsure about which pick-set to buy, get the Klom one I bought, some of the picks in it should be considered cheating. I felt my view on security turned upside-down when I shoved one of the snakey ones in a new lock and it opened as soon as I touched the torsion wrench, as if it was a key I had put in it.