This is usually the case. FOSS would be a rare exception.
The best part is some of these FOSS projects are finally starting to cater to general users such as https://universal-blue.org
I've been using FOSS since I was 15 years old in 2015. Migrated over to Linux in 2016 and have dualbooted ever since. I'm gonna try to stick to Linux throughout the entirety of 2025 and keep using FOSS apps for my content creation (Krita, GIMP, Kdenlive, Inkscape, etc)
I skipped the entire dual boot phase and embraced Fedora after testing it out on a different laptop for some time. One of the big selling points I use about FOSS to other people is that the software do not come with ads or any artificial limitaitons that ask for a premium/pro version.
I only dualbooted because of certain games (BF1, LoL, etc) but now I just decided that it's not worth keeping games with such intrusive anti-cheats installed.
I nuked my Windows partition just this morning and now I have an extra 100+gbs for games on /dev/sda hahaha
I was using Fedora before too, but now I'm on Arch.
I haven't had time for games outside of blockchain for a few years now.
I have an extra 100+gbs for games on /dev/sda hahaha
Congratulations!
I was using Fedora before too, but now I'm on Arch.
I was too afraid to try Arch. Fedora seemed to be good enough + stable enough. The Kernel updates are only a few days behind and if I really had to use Arch, I will use DistroBox + BoxBuddy.