So been trying out Garuda Linux for a while now (my first distro), but feel ready to try another distro. Therefore looking for a distro that suits my preferred requirements, anyone has any tips?
Uses Wayland
Supports flatpak
ButterFS format
KDE Plasma
"Good for gaming"
Note: Got nothing negative about Garuda, I just want to explore the options out there :)---
Throwing Debian in there. Switched from arch 6 months ago. Still running x11 because xfce doesn’t support wayland yet, but KDE does. I run amd cpu and gpu and have no compatibility issues. And with lutris/bottles/proton games run with minimal issues. Plus most every is based on Debian, so why not just use the original.
To add to this: Debian is pretty conservative in regards to package versions. The current and LTS versions usually have slightly older packages.
If you don’t mind tackling more updates, I suggest Debian Testing. That is the stable development branch for the next major release, currently rocking it with Wayland GNOME on my DELL notebook and very happy with the results.
I've always found testing interesting. On one hand, packages have gone through more testing and usage than with sid, but on the other hand, it could be weeks until some major bug gets fixed. Have you experienced any of the latter?
Pretty much every distro supports flatpak and butterFS and for most of them, there's a plasma wayland variant.
If you want to learn a bit about linux in general and the things that you might care about when picking a distro in the future, do a manual arch installation. There's an install script, but you still need to know exactly what you're doing. It just does the steps outlined in the installation guide for you.
Arch is also one of the best distros for gaming because it gets new updates first, which is great when game updates break something and your OS already has the fixes for it.
Believe i read that Garuda Linux in fact say that they recommend against installing flatpaks, which is a little 'turn-off' for me tbh as I really like flatpaks. But thanks for the tips, i might try a pure arch install.
I honestly don't know anything about Garuda. I don't have much meaningful experience with any distro besides slackware. I've had an empty 50gb distrohop partition for months. I was going to give vanilla arch btw a try to see what all the fuss is about, but I haven't gotten around to it.
NixOS, it has some learning curve, but your configuration is stored in git so you can always access any solutions you have employed at any point or any packages you used before
Of course, that also means you can roll back easily and there's also reproducible builds
It is completely different, so worth checking out even as a package manager
Not a programer, but doing a master in Cybersecurity (Digital Forensics), and have previously programmed a fair bit. But yeah, although nix sounds great I'm not quite looking for the steep learning curve quite yet at least. Might treat myself to NIX further down the line 😉
I would recommend Fedora Kionite, or uBlue KDE/ Bazzite.
It's the same as Kionite, but preconfigured with some additional QOL-stuff.
Bazzite is the equivalent to Nobara, but also immutable.
I turned into a huge fan for Silverblue (and spins) over the last few weeks.
Especially interesting is the Universal-Blue-project, which offers many "spins" (or to be more precise, new-interpretations and derivates).
You can just install the vanilla Silverblue and then rebase to Kionite, uBlue, Bazzite, and so on.
And if you don't like it, just roll back/ re-rebase without any hazzle or risks.
Your user data are separated from the system and don't need to get copied from your backup like usually.
What you might like:
Immutable and hard to break. If something breaks (bad update or user fault), roll back. Works even better than Snapper (Tumbleweed) imo, which is pretty much the best BTRFS-implementation.
You don't need to restore it, you just select the image and boot.
Can be rebased (underlying system swapped out) to anything you want. Switch from KDE to Gnome because it now has a feature you missed? One command, a few minutes waiting time for the download, reboot, and you've got a clean "new" system with all your userdata and stuff unchanged!
No reboot for updates required, they just install in the background and get applied when you boot up your PC the next time.
Cutting edge, but stable.
Doesn't only support Flatpak, but relies on it (at least that's recommended).
Install any software you want with Distrobox. Arch, Debian, whatever. Comes pre-installed (uBlue at least) and is an integral part of your workflow if you use the terminal.
A lot of the comments don't fit your criteria. Everyone is just recommending the distro they like. Which is fine, but they should at least say that.
I personally don't have a good answer either. Most my experience is in minimal distros that let you built out those components yourself. It may be worth considering that option (in which case, Arch is a natural next step), but you have to explicitly install wayland / flatpak / kde / etc to fit your criteria.
Try Parrot OS, Home edition.
Smooth, reliable, does everything well and super easy to add your favourite opensource software. It's flagged as a security distro, but it's actually a highly rated Distro without any of that
Welcome. It's pretty good for getting an overview of a given distro. Very well organized.
Also if your are into distro hopping for whatever reason, they have a random button somewhere on the site to view a random distro.