@carlbiker Lots of good folks on here giving you lots of good advice, and interesting to me that nearly all are suggesting that you stop thinking about changing the bike and just go and ride what you have 'cos you've only done a couple of hundred miles.
I reckon that advice is 100% spot-on.
It made me think of my own experience over the last 9 months, and the amazingly long way I still have to go to be anywhere near proficient despite the falls, coaching, advice on here and videos -- and 3000+ kms.
Remember the old adage " You never forget how to ride a bike" ? Well, that's a load of bollox for a starter. I was quite happy riding around when I first (re) started , but only now do I realise that I was re-learning. Over these months I know that Ive improved. I still fall off, but not where and how I did then, what I thought was gnarly is now just a gentle warm-up.
So my advice echoes what others have already said :-
- Get out and ride it -- you will learn from just delivering the miles/clicks even one tarmac.
- Ease yourself into harder terrain , and once you feel comfortable, do the same route another 10 times. It is important imho to do a lot of that on your own as then you will be focused on what you have to do and not follow the leader - and crash . Yes, they will push you but only 2 shortcuts to competence -- Natural Ability or Hard earned Experience. Which are you?
- Ignore your mates that you are currently riding with

, or at least see if they will ride on terrain more appropriate to your current level or find mates at a similar level or little bit better.
- Just relating what I think Ive learned and I lurve this e-MTB thing -- I wish I could progress faster too but reality is I wasn't born with Danny Macaskill's natural ability -- although I 100% suspect he's worked bloody hard at it too!
- Of course that doesn't exclude from buying 1,2 , 3 or 10 new bikes, £'000s of gear and lawd knows I spend enough/too much on my stead. If you can do it -- but that is only going to be a small part of your improvement -- time/miles , effort, soreness and a touch of fatigue are the real answers.