Alright guys, I'm going to do it. Today I'm ditching Windows and trying to run Linux exclusively as my daily driver.
Over the past few days I've been reading up a lot about different Linux distros and DEs with their unique quirks and update philosophy. But since I'm more drawn to some rather niche distros that might suit my needs, I still have some questions, because a lot of more in-depth information has been nuked in the reddit fallout.
Basically, I'm looking for the best out-of-the-box experience for my specific needs, because I don't really have the time to customize my OS from the ground up and have little Linux experience outside of docker. I also don't want to spend months distro hopping, because I need to get some productivity done.
So anyway, here's what I need from the distro out of the box:
- Gaming:
- Bleeding-Edge Nvidia driver support
- VRR support for Multi-Monitor-Setups
- Programming:
- mostly web development, so no real needs other than an intuitive DE with a good workflow
- Media Server:
- I'm running Plex with Sonarr, Radar etc. with multiple streaming devices around the house and VPN remote access, since I'm doing this in docker anyway, this should hopefully not cause any problems no matter the distro
- Tinkering:
- while I want something that just works out of the box, I want freedom. My goal is to tailor the system to my needs and keep learning for months to come.
So, what it has come down to is that I'm currently looking at the following distros with their pros and cons, let me know if I go anything wrong here:
- Pop! OS:
- it's pretty and feature-complete out of the box
- I actually like their spin on Gnome DE and its productivity features
- probably the closest I'll get to "it just works" coming from windows
- it's not bleeding edge, drivers might not be the newest and bugs might persist for long periods
- their own version of Gnome has no VRR support
- seems to be more of a locked-down environment and less "open" than other distros. Getting heavy Apple vibes
- Nobara:
- Everything I need for Gaming OOTB
- Dev seems to have an insanely good reputation
- It seems to be pretty open and basic, as it doesn't brand itself and is basically just fedora with pre-installed packages so you can just get going
- VRR support for Gnome out of the box
- As far as gaming and Nvidia support goes, probably closest to Bleeding-Edge you can get without going Arch
- Fedora appears to be more limited for tinkering with a smaller selection of software and extensions
- I don't really like the default customizations or lack thereof
- Garuda
- everything I need for Gaming OOTB
- even more gaming and file system optimisations than Nobara does offer
- most open environment of the three with endless amounts of customization
- useful features to roll back problematic updates
- does come off as "too playful" and bloated and thus untrustworthy, dunno how to explain. Seems more like a playground than a serious OS
- EndeavourOS:
- Basically lets be do whatever the fuck I want and doesn't hold my hand while at least providing a basic UI
- Basically lets be do whatever the fuck I want and doesn't hold my hand while at least providing a basic UI
So basically, I'm looking for a distro that just lets me game with all the features (especially VRR) and do my work straight away but is as open as possible to customize and learn about Linux environments. It's going to be Arch (btw) isn't it? 😬
When i was still really noob to onward i have jumped from ubuntu, pop os, fedora, linux mint, debian, manjaro, artix, slackware.
I go back between distros from time to time but for a noob and support with out the box experience.
Linux mint is the choice to go, out the box:
removed ubuntu snaps(snaps seem way too bloated for me)
nvidia drivers are easy to install via gui
docs are simple and easy to follow, i had jumped up 2 versions in an old thinkpad w/ nvidia quite easily.
it does have display refresh rate changes.
since its based off ubuntu it does have support for games as well.
really user friendly
Stuff most linux distros have
tinkering out the box, only a select few remove that to have the distro set to read only for user or are heavily integrated to work a certain way where tinkering is a pain.
programming-you can setup it however you like for programming, via ide or through text editor such as vim/neovim etc
vpn remote access for media- its supported in most if not all distros as well.
One thing i want to know is what your computer specs are, since wether a stable distro such as mint or rollin release such as an arch based will depend on your hardware.