I would avoid studying Physics in Italy. I was enrolled in it for a semester at the University of Pisa, which is allegedly one of the best in Italy for the subject, and it was a huge waste of time. Too little lab work, which is essential for STEM subjects. Also, almost all exams are oral, which is a useless assessment method for Physics (and any STEM-related subject). If you REALLY want to study Physics, go abroad like in any English-speaking country or in the Netherlands. No point messing around with people who comb giraffes all day.
Also, I don't know what your high school Maths programme was like, but you should be pretty good with calculus. That's differentiation, integration, limits, and all related theorems. If you don't do that, you're going to be at a severe disadvantage compared to other students coming from a purely scientific background (i.e. Liceo Scientifico like me). There's no point in doing physics that anyway.
I agree with others that hard sciences (as opposed to soft sciences like social sciences and human sciences) are the least cucked. The problem in those areas is how limited you are nowadays in doing research, not with the current knowledge itself. Another problem is how they put words in scientist mouths as if there was a 100% consensus on theories. For example, the Big Bang theory is just a theory (a theory is not fact yet). Same with the Ice Age. For the declassing of Pluto, only less than half the scientific community of the time voted in favour. So, it's debatable whether it's a planet or not. It most likely is, though, given the powerful influence it has.