My suggestion is this:
1. If you are not a law major, you might as well study civil litigation, because you are not a law major, and then study for a master's degree in law. Be a "generalist" after graduation, so that you can have a wider field of employment and enter courts, judicial administrative departments, better and more standardized enterprises, lawyers, university teachers and so on.
2. If you study law and devote yourself to academic research, you can choose criminal prosecution. The fields that can be employed after graduation are: courts, procuratorates, judicial administrative departments, lawyers, university teachers, scientific research institutions, etc.
Of course, I think hobbies are also very important, and what direction I like is also a decisive factor.