vidsgame: I do hope though, that Linux does get way better and more stable because Microsoft seems to be headed in the opposite direction and they of course, have no concern for their users.
Stuck between a rock and a hard place or at least that seems imminent to be the case soon.
Darvond: Linux has been rock solid for over 20 years. Red Hat, Debian, Slack, and others have already walked the long path. New distros and gimmick distros tend to yank things in odd directions against the cloth.
Also, the terminal isn't scary. Heck, most terminal commands are better documented than their GUI counterparts. Just man a command and read the pages as you demand.
I just ran a CLI update and it took the whole of a few seconds to check.
They are solid but the reliance on Wine could be an issue as there is no alternative. Being unable to run the majority of the games on Linux without Wine is a huge issue because Wine updates and I have found that those at least break one game.
Terminals depend on who you talk to. There is no denying they have a learning curve no matter how well documented they are. I have read tons of man pages and they do little to help me learn anything. Most of the time, I have to ask someone in the Linux forums so someone could break down what the man means and what command I'm looking for.
I'm talking about Microsoft's broken updates. Linux is looking better by the day because of that because Microsoft is breaking things that should have no problems working. Linux is perfectly usable for desktop, home internet and even home theatre.
However, I have spent a year making it work for games and I'm talking about old games from GOG. I was unsuccessful, so instead I use Mint for home theatre purposes which worked out perfectly with no issues. Coming from Windows there is no way I could know my way around a command line without having experience with it or constantly having to ask people and then wait for an answer.