Idk, since 10.04 I've appreciated that Ubuntu is as far as a mainstream Linux desktop distro as it gets and just works (I used to run various distros including RH/CentOS, Debian, Suse, Gentoo, and also FreeBSD). But I'm on the brink to leave (maybe towards Void Linux, Debian/Devuan, or back-to-Slackware) because the things I care about have atrophied (lightweight DE, real Unix environment) while crap (snap, systemd, gnome-shell, invasive command-line suggestions) has taken over. On 19.10 gnome-shell really gets in the way for me. And Unix command line utilities I'm using all the time stopped working for me (for example, even vim on Ubuntu 19.04 comes with broken syntax highlighting OOTB, and annoingly and incompetently inserts tabs and spaces where there must be none, something I haven't seen any vi implementation doing for over 30 years; also, awk rejects complex regexpes all of a sudden on 19.04). I know there are other 'buntus shipping with alternatives for gnome-shell but for me the point is/was that there is a large installed base eliminating glitches, which however isn't the case for alternate 'buntus any more than it is for non-'buntus. I also don't see the benefit of yet another packaging format; the point of a desktop distro should be to deliver a consolidated set of shared libs rather than going nuclear and ship everything in fscking containers, especially when there are exactly zero new desktop apps coming out these days (with the exception of Chrome which I'd rather install containerized, and which I only use for website testing, my main browser being FF anyway).