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Depends on the use case. If you are a newb, then any distro which does it best to provide you with as many visual tools for different tasks as possible, such as Mint, or has maintainers which put an extra emphasis on improving the gaming experience on Linux, such as Solus.
If you already know what you are doing though, then go for a rolling distro to get access to the newer kernels and graphics drivers faster, and without having to undertake additional steps, like adding an unofficial repository etc...
Manjaro is what I use. It's rolling (I'm on testing branch) and has some great GUI tools builtin for upgrading the kernel and other stuff.
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[–] buggermeharder [S] ago
Which distros are better for gaming?
[–] Kleyno 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Depends on the use case. If you are a newb, then any distro which does it best to provide you with as many visual tools for different tasks as possible, such as Mint, or has maintainers which put an extra emphasis on improving the gaming experience on Linux, such as Solus.
If you already know what you are doing though, then go for a rolling distro to get access to the newer kernels and graphics drivers faster, and without having to undertake additional steps, like adding an unofficial repository etc...
Manjaro is what I use. It's rolling (I'm on testing branch) and has some great GUI tools builtin for upgrading the kernel and other stuff.
[–] buggermeharder [S] ago
I don't know much. I'm using a live distro called antiX. What's "rolling"?