It's not all "purists" and "tribalism", Manjaro actually has issues. Besides the well known certificate issues and older packages, I have the following anecdote which made me really dislike it.
A friend has Manjaro and one day his nvidia drivers stopped working after an update. I helped troubleshoot over the phone, while looking over the wiki. For nvidia drivers they have their own wrapper around pacman.
Turns out there's a different nvidia driver for each kernel version. Already a stupid design. So unlike arch where there's 1 kernel package (the latest the distro offers) and 1 matching nvidia driver, Manjaro has dozens...
The wiki never mentions how to install or update the drivers manually with pacman or anything like that. It pushes their own tool, a stupid wrapper around pacman, which is supposed to manage this for you.
In my friend's case, the tool failed. It was trying to run pacman but there was a conflict issue. But the tool didn't show the pacman output, so we couldn't figure out what the tool is trying to do, and why it doesn't work. We tried removing the tool and re-installing, and all kinds of messing around with it. It failed to install the drivers, it failed to remove the drivers, it kept failing whatever we tried.
Eventually we figured out the naming convention they used for the packages (again not mentioned in the wiki), and manage to install the correct kernel - driver pair manually, using pacman.
Tl;dr: poor design, bad documentation, and they push their own crappy tools which hinder instead of helping
I should be sleeping right now...
I've been trying to adjust my sleep schedule so I go to bead earlier so I can get up at around 9 without being uselessly tired. Haven't managed yet but I hope to get there slowly.
It would be nice if they fix VR for linux. It's been broken for me ever since the 2.0 update so ofc I'm not gonna be buying more games if I can't even play them.
I think that's a feature. I find "gaming" laptops with all the red stripes, rgb, stupid angles everywhere, etc. to look very cringe.
If anything it incentivizes people to buy a separate "work" laptop (for those who might need to buy one themselves) because you can't show up with that thing at a professional meeting or something like that because it looks ridiculous, juvenile, and in bad taste.
I think the language is harder but more powerful than Nix's.
Imo a better manual and examples would help a lot.
I'd say one of the biggest issues is the one with proprietary drivers - you can't really find examples and guides on how to get drivers working because it's kept hush-hush, and to install them yourself requires knowledge on how to set things up, knowledge which beginner users don't have ofc.
I'm a big fan of Guix and Guile but atm I couldn't switch over due to this.
I think it's much better than the usual shit they do these days like "You won't believe what bla bla bs"... At least it tells you what the article is about and you can decide if you want to learn more about that or not.
The trade war US and EU are pushing for seems like a stupid attempt to stop China from developing.
It's very petty of them because they can't compete fairly and have to resort to such BS, and I don't think it's going to work.
I think they have the means but not the motivation. I can think of only 2 reasons why the state of anti-cheat is the way it is: