To add to D.I. Johnson's excellent post.
Mojave does support 32 bit apps, but kind of grudgingly. High Sierra was the last version of macOS to support 32 bit without compromise (Apple's words).
That said, I did have the CS6 Master Collection running in Mojave on a 2018 mini. Though it's not easy. Things I ran into:
- Adobe shut down the activation servers for CS6 at least two years ago. What will happen when you try to activate CS6 after an install is (if it still does the same thing), the suite will throw out a message that it can't activate the suite due to some error. It will do this two or three times. After that, you'll get a different message that says something like, "Oops! We can't seem to complete the activation…". Along with that, it will provide a link that takes you to a page on Adobe's site to do a manual activation. I presume as part of the process it makes sure the serial number isn't in use by someone else, or attempting to be used by multiple people with a stolen/shared number. Once activated, you'll notice there still isn't a choice in any CS6 app to deactivate the suite, as if it's still inactive. But it is active and ready to use.
- Applying the last updates isn't easy. I had set all of them aside on an external drive, which was a good thing because you can no longer download any of them from Adobe's site. However, you still can't use them. You'd think they would have been stand-alone updaters, but they still fail.
- In relation to that, Premiere Pro will show as broken (red "no" symbol over the app icon). This can be fixed, and the updates can be completed, but you'll need to call Adobe and request their help to finish.
As mentioned by D.I. Johnson, even though the apps show as being 64 bit when you do a Get Info on the main apps, there are quite a few underlying support modules that are 32 bit only. Which is why the suite cannot run under any version of macOS newer than Mojave. The installer itself is 32 bit.
If you must move forward, such as due to incompatibility with files from clients using the latest Creative Cloud apps that can't be properly opened in the CS6 apps, then you really have no choice but to start using the Creative Cloud subscription suite.