> Soundcard Oszillascope.
Soundcards are 10K impedance and accept 2V max (some a little more, some less) audio and !zero! DC.
Signals inside a tube guitar amp run 20V audio and 200V DC at 40K+ impedance.
Connecting a soundcard (even "protected") inside a tube guitar amp will load and mis-shape the signal you hoped to observe, and blow-up the soundcard. (Possibly the whole PC.)
> I have a laptop
The "sound card" is tightly integrated with the laptop main board. So the dire result is not just "no sound" but probably "dead laptop".
An *important* detail of a bench 'scope is the high input impedance (little loading) and wide-range attenuator (can take small or LARGE signals). You don't get that on a sound card. You may get that on the PC-connected external gizmo, but some I've seen only go to a few dozen Volts (ample for anything today *except* tube guitar amps), and anyhow that's $250.
A minor detail is that sound cards think "sound" goes to 20KHz, sometimes 50KHz, with VERY sharp cut-off. The lamest factory 'scope I ever used claimed 450KHz (honestly 200KHz). While you can learn a lot inside a 20KHz limit, in some odd cases it is VERY useful to have a clue what's happening just above the audio band.
IMHO, the most-crude and rude 'scope is much more suitable than a PC.
You could build a buffer for a sound card. Be a fair amount of work.
Heck, you can build a 'scope. DuMont did it. _I_ did it (in the gutted hulk of a DuMont 'scope). Not much more to it than a Champ.