narc0tic_bird,

Rolling release: openSUSE Tumbleweed Semi-annual release: Fedora KDE Spin LTS: Kubuntu (3 years), Debian (5 years), AlmaLinux (10 years)

I personally think semi-annual is where it’s at. You get packages that are mostly up-to-date (and with Flatpak user-facing software is up-to-date anyway), and you don’t have to fear that something will break/be incompatible with every small update.

leopold,

Kubuntu is also semi-annual, but LTS releases only come every two years. Regular releases have a year and a half of support.

agelord,

KDE Neon

TheGrandNagus,

Fedora KDE spin.

MyNameIsRichard,
@MyNameIsRichard@lemmy.ml avatar

openSUSE Tumbleweed. It’s rolling and reliable.

Ozy,

I think fedora kde is the one you should go with.

If you go with kubuntu you’ll be using snaps by default (which can be removed entirely with some tweaking) and they aren’t actually good (as with the recent steam issues)

WindowsEnjoyer,

Anything *ubuntu is not good for gaming.

Beefytootz,

Kde neon isn’t bad. If I’m remembering right, it’s based on Ubuntu and made by the kde team

Jumuta,

neon is amazing

jerrythegenius, (edited )
@jerrythegenius@lemmy.world avatar

Fedora kde spin, kubuntu (ubuntu but with kde), kde neon (kde’s distro). I’ve never used neon or kubuntu as a daily driver (just when I was looking for a distro) although they are supposed to be quite good, but I use fedora gnome as a daily driver and fedora kde should be fairly similar. You can also use distrochooser to find a distro that suits.

Molten_Moron,

Well, judging by the fact that it gave me my favorite (and current (Mint)) distro on the first try, I’ll say this tool is pretty solid lol

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