I switched to mint in November, almost everything just works (I mainly use my desktop for gaming). And everything that doesn't, works after visiting the mint forum or is just a minor inconvenience.
I dunno; ive had trouble trying to internally rewhatsit outgoing broadcast UDP packets to multicast UDP (or even TCP and then back on the other side) packets for use with some 25 year old windows software. So clearly Linux sucks.
Manjaro is amazing, but might have a little steep learning curve should you use it for something very advanced. Also, no .deb's and .rpm's for you, but AUR is arguably even more based (don't rely on it too much though, troubleshooting issues with AUR-sourced apps is an advanced task indeed!)
Other than that, an insanely snappy (thanks, Arch!), beautiful (thank you, presets for various DEs!), almost bleeding-edge and very novice-friendly distribution.
Can't endorse Gnome enough. I feel like something about it is anti ADHD for me. It optimizes screen size usage. And, the division of tasks into workspaces is glorious. It honestly bothers me a little that it helps me be productive despite myself.
No else one is advocating for GNOME desktops so I will. I've tried Mint, Ubuntu, Zorin, Pop!, and a few others. Personally I love my Fedora machine. It's super easy to use, play all my games on it save a couple due to anti-cheat reasons. GNOME is developed kinda sorta in line with Fedora and is very extensible because of the community plugins, it's much better than it used to be. To me it looks really clean, makes sense when navigating, and stays out of the way. Red Hat exists, so if you need support you can probably even rely on some RHEL documentation.
You might have some trouble if you use multiple displays with different resolutions, depending on your use case, but my 4k/1080p setup is really solid.