Arch Linux Based: CathyOS vs. Manjaro
Arch Linux Based: CathyOS vs. Manjaro
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Linux Distro Showdown · May 2026
CachyOS
vs
Manjaro
Two Arch-based distributions. One for raw power. One for comfort. Which deserves your next install?
01 — Introduction
Two roads from Arch
Both CachyOS and Manjaro start from the same foundation: Arch Linux, the rolling-release powerhouse beloved for its freshness and flexibility. But from that shared base, the two distributions have taken dramatically different philosophies. One sprints toward maximum hardware performance. The other walks steadily toward maximum user comfort. In 2026, the gap between them has never been wider — or more interesting.
CachyOS has surged to the top of DistroWatch’s popularity charts and stayed there for over 18 months. Manjaro, once the undisputed king of beginner-friendly Arch derivatives, has settled into a mature, stable, and commercially-backed position. Understanding which one suits you means understanding what each one fundamentally values.
An Arch derivative that rebuilds the entire repository with aggressive CPU-specific compiler flags, ships a custom BORE-scheduled kernel, and aims to extract every last cycle from modern hardware.
A polished, commercially-backed Arch derivative that delays upstream packages by ~2 weeks for stability testing, includes automatic hardware detection (MHWD), and targets the broadest possible user base.
02 — Latest News (2026)
What’s changed recently
Both distros have been active in 2026. Here’s what matters most from their recent releases.
03 — Head-to-Head
The full breakdown
| Category | CachyOS | Manjaro |
|---|---|---|
| Base | Arch Linux (direct repos) | Arch Linux (staged repos, ~2 week delay) |
| Kernel | Custom linux-cachyos with BORE scheduler, MGLRU, Propeller+AutoFDO optimization EDGE | Standard Linux 6.18 LTS; graphical kernel manager for switching |
| Package Builds | Recompiled with x86-64-v3/v4 flags, LTO, PGO for modern CPUs EDGE | Standard Arch compilation flags; broader hardware compatibility |
| Update Cadence | Bleeding-edge, follows Arch directly FRESHEST | ~2 week buffer for stability testing SAFER |
| Installer | Calamares with animated DE previews (Plasma, GNOME, COSMIC, Niri, 17+ options) | Calamares; mature and polished, MHWD auto hardware detection EDGE |
| Desktop Options | KDE Plasma (default), GNOME, COSMIC, Hyprland, Niri, Sway, i3, XFCE, and more (17+) EDGE | Xfce (flagship), KDE Plasma, GNOME; community editions for others |
| Hardware Detection | No MHWD equivalent; manual driver setup required | MHWD auto-detects GPUs, hybrid graphics, Wi-Fi, and more EDGE |
| Gaming | Proton-CachyOS fork, FSR4/DLSS/XeSS upgraders, Handheld Edition for Steam Deck, ROG Ally, Legion Go EDGE | Standard Proton; good gaming support but no custom fork |
| Stability | Rolling; custom patches can introduce edge-case instability | Rolling with buffer; historically more predictable EDGE |
| Snapshots | Btrfs + automatic bootable snapshots via Limine/GRUB TIE | Btrfs supported; snapshot tooling available but less automatic |
| Community | Fast-growing; support on Discord and Telegram primarily | Large, established forums; extensive guides and documentation EDGE |
| Commercial Backing | Community-funded (sponsor model, ~€13,500 raised in 2025) | Backed by Manjaro GmbH & Co. KG, a registered company EDGE |
| Wayland Default | Yes (since late 2025) TIE | Yes (KDE + GNOME, since Manjaro 26.0) |
| Popularity (2026) | #1 on DistroWatch for 18+ months LEADING | #8 on DistroWatch (still top-10, declining trend) |
04 — Deep Dives
What actually matters
Performance: CachyOS’s biggest advantage
The performance gap between CachyOS and Manjaro is real and measurable. CachyOS doesn’t just install Arch — it recompiles the entire package repository using x86-64-v3 and x86-64-v4 instruction sets, meaning your CPU’s AVX2 and AVX-512 capabilities are actually used for everyday applications. Standard Arch (and Manjaro) skip these optimizations for compatibility reasons, leaving performance on the table.
The custom linux-cachyos kernel takes this further. The BORE (Burst-Oriented Response Enhancer) scheduler is tuned for desktop responsiveness under heavy multitasking — something the standard CFS scheduler wasn’t specifically designed for. As of April 2026, CachyOS even shipped Linux 7.0 with additional MGLRU and scheduling patches before most other distributions had even announced plans for it.
The default kernel is now optimized using Propeller combined with AutoFDO, delivering approximately a 10% throughput improvement and reduced latency depending on the workload.
Stability: Manjaro’s quiet strength
Manjaro’s reputation for stability comes from its “cascading stability” model. Packages pass through unstable → testing → stable branches before reaching most users, giving the team roughly two weeks to catch regressions introduced upstream. For users who depend on their machine for work and can’t afford random breakage after a system update, this buffer is genuinely valuable.
CachyOS, being closer to raw Arch, ships updates faster — but its custom kernel patches and recompiled packages introduce variables that vanilla Arch doesn’t have. Most users report it as highly stable in practice, but the theoretical risk is real, particularly on niche hardware configurations.
Released January 4, 2026, with Linux 6.18 LTS, GNOME 49, KDE Plasma 6.5, Xfce 4.20 — and the first stable inclusion of the COSMIC desktop environment. Both KDE and GNOME editions now default to Wayland.
Gaming: CachyOS has become the go-to
CachyOS has invested heavily in gaming infrastructure. Its Proton-CachyOS fork includes FSR4 support for RDNA3 GPUs, DLSS and XeSS version upgraders, AMD Anti-Lag 2 support in both Mesa and Proton, Wine NTSync and WoW64 mode improvements, and optional per-game shader caching. The dedicated Handheld Edition officially supports the Steam Deck OLED and LCD, ROG Ally, Lenovo Legion Go, and Legion Go S — with the March 2026 update adding native firmware updates through fwupd.
Manjaro supports gaming through standard Steam and Proton but ships no custom fork or gaming-specific kernel. It works well, but CachyOS is simply more focused on the gaming use case from the ground up.
Ease of use: Manjaro still leads for newcomers
CachyOS has dramatically improved its onboarding — animated desktop previews in the installer, Cachy-Update for one-click upgrades, automatic Btrfs snapshots as a safety net, and the new Shelly GUI package manager (April 2026). But Manjaro’s MHWD hardware detection tool remains unmatched. Plug in an NVIDIA laptop, and Manjaro will identify and install the right driver automatically. CachyOS requires users to handle this themselves — manageable for intermediate users, but potentially frustrating for newcomers.
Manjaro also has a decade of forum posts, guides, and community documentation behind it. When something breaks at 2 AM, the answer is more likely to already exist in the Manjaro forums than on CachyOS’s Discord.
05 — Verdict
Which one should you choose?
Neither distro is objectively superior — they serve different users with different priorities. CachyOS wins on raw performance, gaming depth, and cutting-edge currency. Manjaro wins on stability, hardware compatibility, and community support. The right choice comes down to who you are.
- You have a modern CPU (2015 or newer) and want it fully utilized
- Gaming is a priority and you want the best Linux gaming stack
- You use a gaming handheld (Steam Deck, ROG Ally, Legion Go)
- You want the absolute latest packages without delays
- You’re comfortable managing drivers manually
- You want Arch-level control without the manual installation
- You’re new to Arch-based distributions
- Plug-and-play hardware support matters to you
- You prefer a stable, tested update pipeline
- You have NVIDIA hardware and want automatic driver setup
- You want access to a large, established support community
- You prefer an officially backed, commercially supported distro
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