this post was submitted on 18 Jan 2026
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[–] forkDestroyer 3 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Which distro did you end up going with? Wanted to change my tower over from Windows. Guessing bazzite is appropriate?

[–] Thteven@lemmy.world 7 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

I'd suggest trying a couple through live ISOs to see what works best out of the box with your hardware. I settled on CachyOS and definitely recommend it. Bazzite is ok, very stable, but keep in mind it is immutable which may hamper its abilities as a full desktop.

[–] peoplebeproblems@midwest.social 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Oh it's immutable? Damn.

That explains some shit.

How do I go about switching to CachyOS? Just wipe the NVME and run an installer?

[–] Thteven@lemmy.world 2 points 22 hours ago

Yeah I'd wipe it if you're going to switch, always less headaches that way. CachyOS has a lot of options so I'll throw my 2 cents out there, I set it up with btrfs file system and the limine bootloader because it automatically sets up snapshots so you can roll back if something gets borked. It's also easier to get secure boot working with limine if you're trying to dual boot.

[–] Jaysyn@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

Kubuntu on my main workstation & Linux Mint on everything else.

[–] Odemption@sopuli.xyz 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Arch was described as hard mode but I installed EndeavourOS with KDE Plasma about a month and a half ago and it's been smooth sailing. Given all the programs I use have native linux clients and I don't play kernel level anti-cheat games at all.

[–] addie@feddit.uk 1 points 1 day ago

The ArchWiki is the best hand-holding that you're going to get on Linux, it's the finest system administration documentation that the OS has available. But Arch doesn't "do things for you automatically", that's not their ethos. So it's hard mode until you've developed enough sysadmin skills to understand what the docs are telling you, and then it's easy mode because it all works great together and you've a phenomenal reference source.

We run SUSE at work; and when SUSE is working, it's a damn fine Linux - secure by default, up-to-date, efficient. But if it stops working, man alive, I wish we were using Arch instead. (Admittedly, we just redeploy anything on SUSE that stops working, which takes moments, whereas fixing Arch takes a while but at least you can fix it.)