Just to say that I am with white
Chess Opening PROBLEM

What is challenging about it? The queen isn't really threatening anything, is taking a good square from his knight and you can win tempos to develop with Bg5 possibly in the future.
Just do the same as in every opening, get your pieces out, control the centre, and castle.
Bc4 and d4 are the moves I would consider here.
I don't know it's just annoying and I don't know what to play.
I usually play Bc4, d3, bd2 or be3 for castling on the queen's side.

I don't know it's just annoying and I don't know what to play.
I usually play Bc4, d3, bd2 or be3 for castling on the queen's side.
I assume you mean Bd3 not e3, which is a bad move because it blocks the d pawn, so makes it hard for you to develop your other bishop.
d3 blocks your light squared bishop.
Be2 is a bit passive for my liking.

I don't know it's just annoying and I don't know what to play.
I usually play Bc4, d3, bd2 or be3 for castling on the queen's side.
I assume you mean Bd3 not e3, which is a bad move because it blocks the d pawn, so makes it hard for you to develop your other bishop.
d3 blocks your light squared bishop.
Be2 is a bit passive for my liking.
I assume he meant Bc4, followed by d3 (and now the bishop is outside the pawn chain c2-d3-e4) and then Be3. I cannot see how Be3 can block the d-pawn. However, I think opening the centre with an early d4 is best

Both 4.Bc4 and 4.d4 with the idea 4...exd4 5.Nxd4 or 5.e5 (but not 5.Qxd4 which throws away a big chunk of the advantage after the queen trade) look adequate.

In these kinds of openings, the biggest problems you can run into are caused by your own actions. Don't try to force the queen move into being a mistake. It already is a mistake, but one they might recover from if you are impatient. Look at what is attacked, ensure your position is solidly defended, look at what is weakened (dark squares on queenside here, hole on d6, etc.), and develop your pieces with those weaknesses in mind.
Yes, you may get a tactic on the queen. If you think you see one, make sure. Calculate it out. No matter what they do, will you end up ahead? This is exactly the kind of position where the saying "don't play wish chess" applies. Don't wish they won't see what you are doing. Make sure even if they see it, you come out better.
The queen is a great piece to build tempo on, but don't do it without reason. Don't just throw up a knight or bishop to attack it unless that move is where you actually want your piece to live after they have moved away or is a stepping stone to where you want it. If you are wasting moves to attack the queen, you are not getting a tempo off it.
I have a problem about chess opening with opponents who opens like this
The main problem is Queen F6 opening, I have no a idea what to play next and how to win against that opening.