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Well, entire books have been written about this topic, so it's difficult to answer this in a Lemmy comment. The main division is between the pre-war years and the WW2 years. War is rarely popular, especially not total war. But a dictatorship can be popular if it can convince the public that it's serving the interests of the people, and that was certainly the case in the 1930s in Germany.
Your OP mentions that "there was a drop in the quality of living for them"; I don't think this is true. People (everywhere) overall tend to care more about economics and personal well-being than civil liberties, and for many ordinary German people, Hitler's policies (before the war) were (or at least: were perceived as) beneficial in terms of personal well-being. We find it obvious in hindsight that passing laws such as "the executive branch gets to pass any law it likes including laws that violate the constitution" or "all parties except the NSDAP are hereby banned" are awful examples of authoritarianism, it was not obvious to the people living at the time who hadn't been used to a parliamentary republic for a long time yet.
Here are a few links that may help your understanding: