Iāve been meaning to make the leap for some time, but I had a hiccup with Mint a little while ago, and my key reason for choosing Mint above all others has disappeared. My Windows machine is doing the usual āyouāve had this installed for a while so itās just going to keep getting slower unless you do a fresh re-installā thing that Windows seems to do, and Iāve got more time on my hands than last time I tried, so I figure why not put that time to use.
The first thing is that Iāve got an nVidia card. Iām not allergic to having to play around with settings and download drivers, but itād be nice to have something that just works with that card and which is designed to work with that card, rather than having to bodge something together out of sellotape & string.
I also have 3 monitors. And they donāt all connect with the same kind of socket/lead. I believe that both nVidia & multiple monitors, and especially nVidia and multiple monitors is a bit of a sticky point with many distros.
I am something of a gamer, but I donāt tend to play stuff which is resource-intensive. No AAA titles. Think more āgames which cost Ā£20 or under on Steamā. So I donāt think I need a distro which is optimised for gaming, but I would like one where Iām likely to be able to play most things I own with a minimal amount of fudging.
I do have some utilities that I use. Iād like to avoid dual-booting, if possible, but I understand that it might be necessary. Reaper has a native Linux version, so thatās not a problem, but if I understand correctly using vst & clap plug-ins might need some attention? Again, if that can be done with as little difficulty as possible, then thatād be great. I also have a usb keyboard/controller (piano, not typing), so if thereās any potential issues with that, itād be nice if the distro had been built with something like that in mind.
I also do some video/photo stuff, which donāt have Linux-native versions. I use Affinity (v2 and the newly-released version), Magix Vegas, and Wondershare Filmora. I donāt know if itād be possible to run any of them in a virtual machine or something. I have tried the Linux-native alternatives, and while they have their merits, I wonāt be able to use them as full replacements.
Now, perhaps unusually for a newbie, when it comes to wanting something Iām familiar with, Iām actually not bothered by having an envirnment which resembles Windows. In fact, I think itād probably be a plus if the distro does things differently. Itās fun to try different things, and if someoneās genuinely thought āthis is a better way of doing thisā, then Iām happy to give it a go. As long as thereās decent documentation. Iām not allergic to the idea of the terminal or otherwise having to use typed commands (I have a Raycast-ish-like app on Windows which I use to launch apps and search for files, for example), but Iām also not very experienced with that and would need very good, very newbie-friendly documentation.
And for customisation, Iād like to be able to be able to make it look pretty. Juxtopposedās recent Linux video was very cool, and I could see myself wanting to do something like that but, unlike her, Iāve got very little coding experience and if there were any coding involved Iād need even better documentation than I would for the command line stuff. And, this really isnāt important, but ATM I run an app called Lively Wallpaper, which allows me to make it look like the glass looking onto the desktop has rain running down it. If there just happens to be a reasonably simple and non-resource-hogging way to have animated wallpapers, then thatād be a lovely bonus.
So thatās it. Sorry for the long, rambly wall of text, but I feel like for responses to be truly helpful, people should know exactly what it is Iām looking for. Please ask any follow-up questions if thatāll help with suggestions. I think Iāve said everything which could be important, but I donāt know what I donāt know.


Cachy is what Iāmgoing to try first. Iām semi-resolved to dual-booting for the video/photo stuff.
Iāve also got a vague plan at some point in the future to buy a desktop mac and one of those boxes where you can just switch monitors/input device routing at the press of a button. Maybe put the video/photo stuff on that. Although, that said, Iāve got a colleage who is a graphic designer on the side and the only reason heās got a Windows machine is that even the biggest mac he owns canāt handle the graphics. Heās an Apple evangelist yet even he says that Apple does not do graphics well.
The stuff I do is nothing like the stuff he does and I donāt need anything as powerful as him, but I am still aware that āget a mac to do video stuffā isnāt necessarily the best plan. But Iām likely getting one anyway for other reasons, so it canāt hurt to try.
Since you are going the dual boot route, I highly recommend that you keep the OSās on separate drives and never use systemd, or GRUB boot for windows, ie always switch your boot order in your uefi. This is mainly because there are countless formatting and system repair issues with using one drive, and regardless of where the OSās are, windows has a strong tendency to overwrite your Linux bootloader.
Yeah, thatās kind of what Iād gathered. Iāve got a few dead computers around and Iām going to take a drive out of one of those and use that for the Linux while keeping Windows on the drive itās already on.