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CachyOS continues being one of the most popular Linux distributions, and the brand new release comes with lots of welcome improvements to setting it up. Should be smoother, and easier to install it while looking pretty slick too.

What actually is CachyOS? They say it's a "fully optimized Arch Linux desktop with CPU-specific package builds, a tuned kernel, and your choice of desktop environment. Browse, develop, create, and game on a system built for speed — powered entirely by free and open-source software". As of the most recent Steam Survey it was third in the list of popular Linux distros.

The refreshed installer looks good, giving you video previews of the different desktop options, along with some other behind the scenes improvements to make it work better overall.

I think I'm really going to have to give CachyOS a proper go soon to see what all the fuss is about, but I don't want to break my current Fedora KDE install which has been running smoothly for quite some time now. But the distro-hop feeling is getting stronger over here. Let me know how you're getting on with CachyOS in the comments. Convince me!

All the changes are listed below:

Features:

  • Installer:
    • Added support to show GIF/WebP videos in the Desktop Selection to showcase the desktops. This is enabled for Plasma, GNOME, Niri and COSMIC
    • Added support for JPEG XL in the Desktop Selection to reduce image sizes
    • Cachy-Update is now enabled by default for the GNOME and KDE installations
    • Improved microcode installation logic — it will now detect the hardware and install the proper microcode instead of installing both and then removing the unneeded one
    • Improved error message when the EFI partition is too small
    • Sorted the Desktop Environment list from easy and accessible setups to more advanced ones like WMs
  • CachyOS-Welcome:
    • Added a button to easily install and enable “Winboat” for an easy Windows Docker VM
    • Added support for FFMUC DNS server in DNS selection
    • Added Ukrainian translation
  • chwd: Decreased the initramfs size massively for NVIDIA dGPU configurations
  • linux-cachyos: Instead of generating a 0001-cachyos-base-all.patch, a release is now generated in a Linux repository for each release of our patched kernel
  • cachyos-rate-mirrors: Improved the experience for users in China&Russia massively with a proper check before rating the mirrors
  • cachyos-settings: Added support to automatically set the wireless regulatory domain based on timezone
  • website: The website design has been reworked and improved to follow more modern standards
  • GitHub: Added issue templates to important GitHub repos to improve the quality of bug reports and provide guidance for the user
  • Mirrors: New mirrors in Russia (jura12, cachy-arch.ru), Sweden (Zyner), and Canada (All Things Linux)

Fixes:

  • Installer:
    • Removed support for bcachefs in the filesystem selection due to the requirement of bcachefs-dkms
    • Fixed encryption when LUKS2 is used for specific devices
    • Fixed enabling the “ly” display manager
  • cachyos-settings: cachyos-bugreport.sh now redacts IP, username, hostname, and MAC address
  • chwd:
    • Generic handheld profiles and improved support for handheld GPUs
    • fwupd is now enabled for Lenovo handhelds

Changelog for Handheld Edition:

  • gamescope-session: Replaced gamescope-session-plus with gamescope-session-cachyos, which is forked from Valve’s gamescope-session
    • Enables firmware updates for Steam Deck and Lenovo Legion Go devices
  • plasma-login-manager: Replaced SDDM with plasma-login-manager for the login manager
  • bootloaders: Limine is now selected as default with automatic snapshots. systemd-boot will still be selectable
  • Installer: Merged Handheld Calamares with desktop edition calamares together
  • ISO: ISO now uses Wayland instead of X11.

See the CachyOS website for more.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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4 comments

tmtvl 11 hours ago
At the tail end of 2025 I switched from Arch with Cachy repos to OpenSUSE because I wanted SELinux and Cachy doesn't support it. It was perfectly fine aside from that, though I ran the Zen kernel instead of the Cachy kernel so I don't know whether that makes any difference.

Last edited by tmtvl on 9 Mar 2026 at 11:35 am UTC
Jarmer 8 hours ago
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I've been running cachy since probably middle of last year and it's been a wonderful experience. No problems whatsoever that I can remember. The "octopi" package manager takes a bit of getting used to, but once I was over that, it's been smooth sailing ever since. Highly recommended distro, and getting even better all the time! When Epoch 2 of Cosmic DE comes out, I'll reflash my entire system with cachy cosmic.
fenglengshun 4 hours ago
Been using CachyOS for a month since migrating from Bazzite. It's been pretty smooth so far.

Octopi seems rough at first, being more like Synaptics or dnfdragora, but once I got used to it I actually quite like it due to how fast and to-the-point it is - it's kinda like having an ultra efficient search engine to Arch packages and AUR.

I still do install stuff on Distrobox and Flatpak for mitigation reasons. But the host system overall is pretty well thought out. It feels like they just set Arch up for you, include many optimization in the backend, and otherwise unintrusively give you Arch with just a couple of nice-to-have and decent out-of-box-experience.

I think that's what makes it stand out from Manjaro, Garuda, Endeavour. It still feels like Arch, as the nice-to-haves and the defaults feels seamless even though they absolutely set things up for you... Arguably pretty aggressively. I think it's because it feels unopinioated regarding stuff that people notice, while actually setting things up for you.
Okona 2 hours ago
I'm using it now since about 2 years and it is smooth sailing so far.
Changed from endeavor to cachy because of its smooth zfs integration. (no dkms necessary)
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