Thanks for all the help so far. Sorry for all the questions but trying to understand.
So is it a given that if I used tablets that the cya level will get too high by the end of summer? My uncle used only those and insists he has no problems. Also, that's what the pool stores recommend so how do they keep people's pools clean with them? I'm not doubting that it can be a problem, I'm just asking is the problem pretty much unavoidable if I use tablets?
Pool stores recommend them because A.) They are authorized dealers for chemical manufacturers and that's what the manufacturers tell them to do, and B) they generate more revenue than bleach.
People that swear by pucks usually get by because they partially drain the pool every winter which reduces the CYA, and they are lucky enough to not get past the CYA buildup point of no return before they dump half their water. What we notice on the forum is that people start using pucks, and right around August of year 2 or 3 of pool ownership, they have algae running out of control and no matter how much they spend at the pool store, it won't go away, and no one knows why. We, of course, know exactly what the problem is. But, I digress....
If you use only tablets, it is a given that your CYA will get too high. How fast depends on a couple of things. Lots of sun and lots of use means lots of tabs, so the CYA will build fast. Low sun and low use, and it will build slowly, plus a partial drain for winter will prolong the "disaster zone" to every other year.
We're not down on pucks. We're just very against the idea of blindly using pucks and hoping everything turns out fine. As long as you understand the ramifications of pucks (pH goes down, CYA goes up, TA will need to be replenished every now and then, overall on a unit basis they're more expensive...can you see I'm biased?

) and are ok with a major drain every now and then, go for it. It's understanding the underlying chemistry that counts.
As for the bleach, it's less work than you think it will be. There's a learning curve, sure, but once you get the pool dialed in, maintenance is almost mindless. I went through about 32 gal of 12.5% last summer over 4 months, and I have a 23K gal pool. Since I know exactly how my pool behaves, I can test every other day and dose every 2nd or 3rd. At first you will need to test and dose every day, but once you learn what the pool needs, you can spread it out a little bit.