Yeah I installed that one you’re thinking of.
That entirely depends on what you’re using it for. I personally use ZorinOS as my daily driver because it’s easy to use, based on Ubuntu, and I like the interface.
If you’re using the PC for gaming, go with Nobara. It’s based on Fedora and has built-in support for Nvidia.
The one I’ve been thinking about is gentoo
Gentoo, if you have time you can mold it into whatever you need. And if you do it right its rock solid. And if you dont have a shit ton of time use debian, its reliable, fast, and has a ton of support articles.
Debian Stanle, everyone else lies.
Fedora. It’s the one Linus uses.
/thread
I use Arch by the way
Pop OS. I don’t even like Mac OS but Pop just feels so good! I’ve used it on 3 different computers now without problems. Ubuntu tutorials usually work if you need to tweak something. Only downside is it’s a private company, but it’s released free and is well supported.
i have two moods:
stable (for a server): debian
rolling release (for gaming): arch
According to a survey of the Linux community, the best distro is always not the one that you picked.
Start out with Linux Mint, it’s a debian/ubuntu based distro which has massive support online and is less likely to break during an update, then when you get use to using linux you can make a more personal decision for which distro suits you best.
less likely to break during an update
In my experience, Ubuntu and Debian are by far the most likely to break during an upgrade
Debian Stable breaks from updating? What?
Upgrading, like from Debian 12 to 13. It’s too complex, and if you install anything out of the ordinary (which you have to if you want packages from this decade), things get even more complicated.
I’ve used the same Arch installation for 14 years and only had issues when we switched to from sysvinit to systemd in 2012 because I didn’t read the news. Easily fixable though
I upgraded my machine from Debian 10 all the way to Debian 13 recently. Never had a problem.
apt doesn’t even have rollbacks
Apt is one of the worst package managers I’ve used. Yum is also trash, dnf a bit better. But pacman is by far the best
I have used quite a few, but my longest used ones, in order, are ZorinOS, Linux Mint, KDE Neon, and now Bazzite.
I’d only shoot recommendations once I hear your use case, experience, and willingness to learn
Surprised I had to scroll so far to see ZorinOS mentioned. I love it, and it’s pretty user friendly for people new to Linux
I recently switched from Linux Mint to Ubuntu Studio. Both are fantastic and intuitive. Ubuntu Studio just has more of the Linux audio configuration worked out by default.
Debian.
✊
Too old 😵
Debian Testing then
Old trying to act young 😂
I switched to Linux last year and in comfortably settled into Arch and now I’m to interested in it to try other distros even though I’m very curious to try…
It’s super easy to start a VM to try.
Just install
qemu(and optionally enable KVM), then to run eg. Ubuntu installer:qemu-system-x86_64 \ -enable-kvm \ -m 2G \ -cpu host \ -smp 2 \ -cdrom /path/to/ubuntu-24.04-desktop-amd64.iso \ -hda ubuntu-disk.qcow2 \ -boot d \ -vga virtio \ -display gtkAfter you install it, run the VM:
qemu-system-x86_64 \ -enable-kvm \ -m 2G \ -cpu host \ -smp 2 \ -hda ubuntu-disk.qcow2 \ -boot c \ -vga virtio \ -display gtkOr use libvirt, like a layer on top to make things much simpler. I use
virt-managerfor GUI andvirshon command line.Oh my goodness, thank you so much this. I’m gonna tinker with it this weekend :)
And when in doubt, just check the Arch wiki, it’s a gold mine








