21 points

You can’t easilyy switch between different inages like on an atomic fedora system.

Do you have to switch now? No.

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1 point

Hopefully we get an official XFCE Atomic desktop someday.

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1 point

You can create a ublue version in a few hours if you’re down to it. Creating an inage isn’t that difficult 👍🏼

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34 points

Nothing, at all.
Some things you can’t do easily in Mint, like create snapshots automatically and boot into them when something breaks.
But it’s all Linux and freely available software under the hood, and the lines between configuration, customization and forking your distro are blurry.

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5 points

ship of theseus

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3 points

I mean…

Steam? Maybe? I dunno, I don’t game but the Steam kids seem to prefer Arch. I’m sure they have their reasons.

Practically? Probably nothing terribly significant.

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3 points

I’m a complete noob in the games department. Btw, I see that you don’t use Arch.

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8 points

Man, I got stuff to do. Lol.

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14 points

Steam and Lutris work well! I can game on XFCE Mint just fine. I actually have an easier time of it than on a number of distros, thanks to the combination of flatpaks and the Ubuntu base. But, I am not “the kids”.

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6 points

I think “they prefer” Arch because a lot of them just bought a Steam Deck and that comes with Arch and it just works.

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6 points

SteamOS is arch, so some of the derivatives are too.

Steam shouldn’t really care though.

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4 points

Reasons are usually just newest kernel/mesa/etc. Most of the time the difference is very small, and often inconsequential. However, every now and again there is a major development that might make it worth it (IE: The graphics pipeline that all but made dxvk-async obsolete)

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4 points

In my experience, not much, but I’m a marginally functional newbie. Mint manages things for you fairly nicely and has been the best, it just works with out messing with much/anything. (At least for my hardware)

I managed to get gnome working smoothly on mint and have been happy with it. I started and returned here since I last ditched windows as a native OS.

The only thing that has made me consider distro hopping from mint is AUR on arch and gnome, though I’ve been successful so far.

Part of trying the distros that are more advanced and give you more explicit control and configuration is the sense of accomplishment and it makes you figure out how and why things work the way they do. It holistically builds your velocity in your understanding of Linux. (Or gnu whatever that nuance is).

If your machine has enough resources it is super easy to host VMs of anything you want to try. You can try them all, and it won’t cost you anything but time!

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6 points

If you feel like you need/want software from AUR you should check out Distrobox. It can run any distro on top of your installation using Docker under the hood, but it tightly integrates into your system so with little effort you can run AUR programs from your launcher as if they were natively installed on your Mint.

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1 point

Thanks, I’ll dig into that one sometime!

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2 points

My advice as well!

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75 points

Brag about being an Arch user (BTW.)

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