Yes Kdenlive is the editor I use. 90% of my videos were done with Kdenlive.
There's a few where I used Flowblade, but Kdenlive is the top for me hands down. Flowblade's stand-out feature is it has a GUI for G'MIC(a graphics library for applying effects to images). And it actually allows you to apply them to videos which is really cool. But that's not even something I actually need.
I see a lot of people who are new to Linux choosing Cachy.
They offer so many desktops I think because by casting that wide net they can appeal to anyone.
Debian & Arch both have basically every desktop/window-manager available, but what's unique about this is you can install any of them with a few clicks.
You don't have to customize anything really. In fact, you're getting the most vanilla version of Gnome, KDE, Cinnamon, Mate what have you. The only custom things they ship are the icon pack, themes(for KDE at least, not sure about the others), and Cachy wallpapers. Plus the couple of Cachy tools/apps that are mostly about kernels, schedulers, daemons.
They do include Fish/ZSH shells, and ZSH has Oh-My-ZSH already installed which is like a customized ZSH environment.
For people who want to game I think Cachy has a lot to offer.
It's definitely tailored towards modern hardware.
But also surprising is the amount of Vulkan graphics-drivers there are available which you are prompted for when you install the gaming packages.
I didn't recognize most of them so I had to look them up, and they're drivers for ARM GPU's, and lots of surprising older/less common chipsets that you don't necessarily find on dekstops/laptops/PC's.
Linux is definitely growing, and I don't think there's ever been a time when more people were interested in using Linux to be honest. For multiple reasons.
Chief among them is Windows 11 & Windows Copilot.