this post was submitted on 08 Aug 2025
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Stick with something better known. Linux Mint, Fedora, openSUSE, Arch, Ubuntu.....If you're just getting into this for the first time, full time, a niche meme distro is not your best choice.
Linux Mint is best for stability, but will be a bit more "stale" for updates, since it's based on Ubuntu LTS. It is an incredible distro and is my daily driver for mission critical desktops, like my work PC.
Fedora and openSUSE Tumbleweed will both be great non-Arch distros that have fairly recent, yet stable updates.
Arch is basically the king of rolling, bleeding edge, always on the latest and greatest, but since it's bleeding edge.....you might get cut on occasion.
Ubuntu is Ubuntu. I don't like Ubuntu, but it is the defacto "newbie/first timer" distro for a reason. Debian-based, lots of guides, both LTS and non-LTS options, and has variants for practically every major desktop environment out there.
I'm surprised LMDE almost never gets shoutouts. I'd assume since people don't like Ubuntu they'd recommend it over Mint.
Mint takes all the good work that's been put into Ubuntu and keeps a bunch of that while not including anything Canonical-specific like snaps. Almost all the typical "how do I linux" webpages new users will stumble upon will have instructions that will work for them. And of course there's a lot of added polish in the Mint distro.
I also like to point out that, unlike we expect to see with non-free corporate enshittified tech, the fact that Mint has a nice layer of polish, looks like Windows out of the box (talking of the default version with the Cinnamon DE), and installs in like 1/10 the time and clicks as Windows... basically, being friendly on the surface doesn't mean it is restricted under the hood. Mint doesn't get weird on me if I have half my monitors covered in terminals, ya know?