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this post was submitted on 05 Jan 2026
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This gives a little bit of credence to the theory of an old installation taking precedence.
Are there other EFI partitions around? Try booting explicitly from each one and see if you get different results
Are there old bootloaders or entries from no longer existing installations lingering around on yor EFI drive? Move them from a live env to a backup or just delete them if you are confident.
How about NVRAM? It's a way for the OS to configure boot straight to your mobo; separate from any disks attached. It doesn't look like it to me but perhaps it is possible your mobo is still trying to load stale OS from NVRAM config and your newest installation didnt touch it? Manually overriding boot in BIOS like above should root out this possibility.
I developed the habit of formatting my disks before a new install, so I'm going to push that hypothesis aside for now.
Before installing Debian I tried Sparky and I noticed it had set up a /boot_EFI and a /boot partition, which sounded off to me, so I wiped the SSD clean and manually partioned it, leaving only a 1GB /boot, configured for EFI.
NVRAM is not completely off the board but I find it odd to just flare up as an issue now, under Debian, and having no problems under Mint or Sparky.
@qyron Just in case you didn't see my other reply which I think might be more relevant for you: https://feddit.online/post/1342935#comment_6604739
I'm going to sit down today and get into it seriously. I've just been replying to comments that I can clarify with no need for me to be messing with the computer.