Why would I setup SSH and VNC access when I can install two flatpaks and never worry again about them fucking it up?
You
very specifically brought up the notion of using an atomic/immutable distro in the context of giving a boomer parent or a grandparent a distribution that, in your opinion, would be easier to handle than a garden variety Linux distro with a standard, mutable filesystem. If you're
already in the position where you have the leverage to decide a parent or grandparent's operating system for whatever computer you set up,
remote access is a requirement unto itself unless you wanna constantly rush over to their aid whenever shit goes tits-up; not "if" but rather "when".
SSH - remotely update your parent or grandparent's computer so that they don't have to manually trigger updates on a user account and invoke admin privileges.
VNC - remotely take control of your parent or grandparent's computer graphically so that you get a birds-eye view of what precisely the relative in question is troubled by.
If you're seriously in that position where you're the de-facto sysadmin for your mom, grandma, or $insert_relative_here's computer, then tools like SSH and VNC on a mutable distro with a normal, transactional package manager like Linux Mint are
vital. Don't bring up the hypothetical granny in this situation if you're not willing to take this thought experiment to its logical conclusion.
Bazzite Linux is essentially rolling.
Guess what? Bazzite is hardly unique in this regard. It's built off the back of
Fedora Atomic, and there are far superior projects that utilise
mainline Fedora as its base. Case in point:
Nobara. If you're a GAMER(tm) who absolutely
needs the latest and greatest kernel+assorted patches and optimisations for GAMING(tm)+Mesa+drivers, Nobara is far and away the superior project by sheer virtue of the fact that it's based off mainline Fedora and it's arguably the
closest that the Fedora ecosystem has to a Linux Mint equivalent. Except GloriousEggRoll ain't Clement Lefebvre and he knows it.
I personally run mainline Fedora 43 Cinnamon because my logic is "why the fuck do I need all these abstract and obtuse patches and optimisations if my monitors are used 1080p enterprise panels that can't even push past 75Hz? 1080p@60fps is 1080p@60fps regardless of whether I'm running Bazzite, Nobara, Fedora Cinnamon, or Linux Mint."
The vidya consumers can never worry about touching their system again until it’s time to buy a new one.
Uh... have you
seen how awful this economy is? Have you
tried negotiating with used parts sellers on eBay for auctions? Have you
tried rolling the dice with Facebook Marketplace? Spoiler alert: AM4's massive longevity, even continuing into 2026 with SKU refreshes on the 5000 series despite "officially" going EOL in 2022, basically means that people are clinging to their older hardware for much longer. Ain't
no one out here buying a wholly new, top-of-the-line AM5/AM6 X3D system with maxed out RAM and all the bells and whistles such that they'd actually stand to benefit from all those obscure tweaks, patches, parameters, flags, and so on.
If a bad update gives their rig a pozz load they can rollback a snapshot and wait a week until the next one patches.
Spoiler alert: this is
not unique to the Fedora Atomic ecosystem. Transactional package managers on mutable filesystems have
already achieved more-or-less seamless rollbacks
entirely offline the way that
@Trans Fat 41g outlines Fedora Atomic and variants
cannot categorically achieve. Not to mention that, ignoring the package manager entirely, the Fedora ecosystem
already gives you Btrfs snapshots that you can roll back to if you bork something.
These distros aren’t for everyone - but they serve a purpose.
Spoiler alert: the only "purpose" they're valid for are in obtuse enterprise and cloud deployments where dozens upon hundreds upon thousands of systems get deployed and only a handful of people are there to manage them all during the standard M-F 9-5 business cycle. To reiterate for basically the third fucking time:
there ain't any value to Fedora Atomic and assorted variants in a home user context. Any hypotheticals about old people or normies are already better served by standard, mutable distros with transactional package managers.