I know my way around a command line. I work in IT, but when it comes to my personal fun time more often than not I’m quite lazy. I use windows a lot because just plugging in anything or installing any game and it just working is great.

But support for windows 10 is ending and I should probably switch sonner rather than later, so I’m wondering if Arch would be a good pick for me? For reference, I mostly game and do Godot stuff in my free time.

2 points
*

Arch is like buying a Lego and putting it together versus an action figure. If you don’t enjoy putting together the Legos then what’s the point?

You should probably go with a ready to use distro

permalink
report
reply
2 points

Arch has great performance but sometimes you update your system and the [choose something] doesnt work anymore. I enjoyed when i had a ton of time to put into, now that i need something that just works and wont break for no reason its a no for me

permalink
report
reply
2 points

Arch requires a lot of effort to maintain.

permalink
report
reply
1 point

That’s just a lie

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point
*
Deleted by creator
permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

My 2¢ is that running Linux, you play the role of user and of sysadmin. On some distros you only put on the sysadmin hat once in a blue moon, but on others you’re constantly wearing it.

My Arch experience is a few years out of date; I felt I played sysadmin more than, say, Debian Stable, but it wasn’t too onerous. I also had an older Nvidia card, so there were some…fun issues now and then.

I use Debian on my machines now, and am happy. Try some different distributions! Even better, have /home on its own partition (better yet, own disk) — changing distros can be nice and easy without worrying about your personal data.

permalink
report
reply
2 points

I don’t mind being the sysadmin of my own machine (I prefer it, in fact). It’s just that I don’t want to spend free time troubleshooting some obscure problem specific to my build because I chose an ASUS motherboard and I don’t have drivers for my wireless headset or something. At least not when I’d rather unwind playing a game.

permalink
report
parent
reply
5 points
*

Once you install Arch with the archinstall script and set everything, you’ll be fine.

Arch is as hard as you make it be. I run Arch with Gnome using mostly flatpaks and I the only maintenance I have to do with my pc is run sudo pacman -Syyu once a day to keep everything up-to-date.

Of course you can make it be as hard as trying to swimming in lava, but it’s your choice to make like that.

permalink
report
reply

Arch Linux

!archlinux@lemmy.ml

Create post

The beloved lightweight distro

Community stats

  • 3

    Monthly active users

  • 130

    Posts

  • 254

    Comments

Community moderators