gooberking: OK. So to ring in the new year lets do a little poll on who here is a Linux user be it casual, serious, or whatever shade of Grey in between.
At home I occasionally use Mint Linux, just to keep a couple of older PCs that originally had Windows XP or even older as feasible net PCs (I feel a bit unsecure using them online with XP, at least with things like online banking or whatever; one of them did get seriously infected at one point with some "Security Sphere 2012" ransom-ware; it was a bitch to get rid of).
At work I use various other Linuxes, usually ones closer to Red Hat Linux (or even RHEL itself). Also certain smaller Linuxes meant for embedded systems, which I kinda dislike because e.g. some of their commands have reduced functionality or are even missing in order to reduce the size, so something that you expected to work does not work after all in them, as certain command doesn't include certain options or whatever. Infuriating, you learn those things by your mistakes.
At some point I also tried CentOS at home, mainly because it was closer to the RedHat family of Linuxes (which I use at work), and I was at a time on a Linux coiurse too where we used CentOS.
I haven't tried gaming on Linux much yet, mainly because at home Linux has been so far been running only on my older hardware (as a secure replacement for old Windows versions). Maybe at some point I will install it also to my newer PC. I have a few times tried WINE, at least Icewind Dale (GOG) seemed to run fine on it.
I recall also trying out e.g. Mandriva, Fedora etc. in the past, but they didn't stick. Especially Fedora, when I realized that it is merely a test (beta?) version of RHEL, so it will always be more or less buggy. CentOS is a much more sensible RHEL-lookalike.