Fedora is for all
You don’t need to be some sort of geek to don a Fedora.
Fedora Linux has always been something of a trailblazer. In one sense it guides CentOS Stream, which in turn sets the road map for the commercial Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). From a desktop point of view, it’s often the first (ahem, Arch BTW) to adopt new features (such as Wayland, Btrfs, Vulkan). Thanks to its (roughly) six-month release cadence, it equals the interim Ubuntu releases, and is way ahead of Ubuntu’s two-yearly Long Term Support (LTS) offerings as concerns new software. Updating your OS twice yearly sounds like a pain, and indeed it used to be. Partly for that reason, partly due to the extra hoops required to install proprietary software, and partly because earlier Fedora releases didn’t quite have Ubuntu’s level of user-friendliness, Fedora has often been put in the ‘intermediate distribution’ rubric.