- Honestly, it sounds like a pain in the ass if you’re a power user. - Somewhat paradoxically, I consider immutable distros to be a net improvement for power users and a bigger hurdle for casual users. - Mostly that’s because immutable moves the pain in the ass to the setup part of the application/OS life-cycle, while theoretically eliminating the kinds of issues that crop up months or years later when something stops working, or when a custom config used to get it working originally breaks something else as things relying on it mature over time. - On the other hand, mutable distros make setting up new software a breeze (in most cases, anyways) with far more under-the-hood tinkering available and have a significantly lower barrier to entry as a result, but become difficult to manage when the user no longer remembers all the customizations and dependencies they have introduced. - So really, there will still be pains in the ass either way. Just kind of a choice on which kind of issues the user would rather predominantly deal with. - The software install process if you’re doing a lot of testing and/or dev on immutable distros is untenable in my experience. I lasted about 3 days on Aurora and had to go back to Fedora, couldn’t stand dealing with the overlay bullshit for anything that wasn’t a flatpak. 
 
 



