Just got the Steam Deck and have everything set up, but I found out that Nobara has a Steam Deck version of their distro. My question is: is it worth switching to Nobara SteamDeck Version or stay on SteamOS? Are there any other big differences other than Arch vs Fedora? Also, does it use KDE?
Pretty much everything will work better with the system specifically design for that particular hardware. The only reason you might want to remove steamos is if you have high privacy/security concerns
Not for a deck but an upcoming laptop I'm currently debating between nobara and bazzite, I keep thinking I've made up my mind and have settled on one but then change it again, is there somewhere I could find a good comparison/any glaring downsides I'm missing?
Bazzite is fucking cool because it uses the OCI framework. It is designed to be immutable and be run rootless(like SteamOS) so your base system just can't break. Everything is sandboxed against everything else by default. Using Fleek/Nix you can even run software from the cloud.
I love Arch, so SteamOS it is. If I were you, I would just make sure I know how to get SteamOS reinstalled properly. Then just check out the Nobara OS yourself. You'll never truly know until it is in your hands.
Yep. I've tried several others and they're not for me, but a lot of people are really happy with them.
I like SteamOS so much that I'm using HoloISO on mini PCs around the house to simulate consoles and stream couch games from my gaming rig upstairs. But my experience isn't everyone's so get your hands on it and try it out.
I've looked at what's doable but not tried. I've come to the conclusion that as a bespoke bit of gaming hardware I'd rather have the bespoke software to go with it. If nothing else, I like the feeling that the "deck verified" emblem for my steam games applies, and when troubleshooting other games there are lots of people with exactly the same software and hardware as me to find help from.
I like tinkering my steam deck is primarily a gaming device and I like that it just works when I want to use it.
Personally I'd stick with SteamOS. It's tailor made for the hardware. Nobara is cool, but I don't think you benefit from it much (unless you really don't want the locked filesystem).