As of a few days ago, I've switched my PC over to Fedora Linux with KDE
It's quite nice ^w^
As with all Linux installs, it has been a bit fiddly
My first trouble was with my graphics drivers, as I'm on an Nvidia 980 Ti, and the open source nouvea drivers... weren't playing the nicest with the Wayland desktop. I didn't grab a screenshot but the screen was flashing at me and leaving ghost images and every other line was missing and... it was just a mess. But switching to the closed source nvidia drivers fixed the issue
I had a Windows Storage Space RAID on Windows 11 (that I'm gonna need to reinstall Windows on a spare drive to get the files off of cause you can't open those on Linux lol). I enjoyed having a RAID, however setting one up on Linux was a little bit more of a pain, with no nice graphical frontend that I could find
I got everything working though through a combination of the instructions here and here
To get my Google Drive syncing to my desktop, I'm currently using the Celeste frontend to rclone. So far it's been quite nice, and I haven't had any issues with it
To get automatic light/dark mode switching working on KDE, I'm using Koi
To get fan control working for my nvidia card, I installed this nvidia-fan-control app using the instructions on it's GitHub wiki here. I'm actually unsure if I set this part up quite right, so this one I may have to continue tinkering with more
I was having issues with Minecraft, where when closing the game it'd have some segfault crashed, which was caused by the combination of nvidia and Wayland. I got that specific bug fixed by adding "__GL_THREADED_OPTIMIZATIONS" with a value of "0" to the environment variables of my PrismLauncher instance
The fact that Linux requires configuration should not be a surprise to anyone, lol. This OS is not built to run perfectly out of the box, it's meant to be tinkered with a bit to get everything set up right. And honestly, the depth of most of these tweaks hardly exceeds stuff I need to do on Windows nowadays to get rid of the factory installed adware.
Overall, I would highly recommend Linux if you're willing to tinker with your machine a bit. I'm already a lot happier with my setup here than I was with Windows.
I'm enjoying Fedora/KDE so far. At some point I may fiddle with some other install, but all things considered this all has been fine