This is my current computer setup as of 5.8.20:

Thinkpad P53
Main OS: Arch Linux
CPU: Intel i7-9850H
RAM: 64GB
SSD: 512GB NVMe
GPU: Intel UHD 630 / nVidia Quadro RTX 3000 Max-Q

Desktop
Main OS: Void Linux (haha)
CPU: AMD FX-8350
RAM: 16GB
SSD: 2 500GB SSDs, one with an optimize-offline'd Win10 Education
GPU: nVidia GTX 970
HDD: 3x4TB HDDs in RAID 5

NAS
Synology DS1019+
HDD: 5x12TB HDD in RAID 5
-Pihole
-Jdownloader
-Plex
-Kiwix

Linux-
I started using Linux as a main OS a few months ago, after maintaining a
couple of  Debian servers  over the years  and installing  Ubuntu/Mint a
couple of times,  and I've seriously fallen in love  with the simplicity
of  Unix/Unix-like systems.  I like  Arch  quit a  bit, but  (ironically
enough) I've  found Void to be  very similar, but better  in certain key
ways. Runit  is very  snappy, and  the system as  a whole  is incredibly
lightweight and minimal, even compared to  my very similar Arch setup; I
find that a  lot of the packages  I want are already in  the Void repos,
whereas with Arch the actual repos are  very small and a good portion of
the packages I want are in the AUR.  A lot of people point to the AUR as
one  of the  strengths of  Arch, but  I've found  there's an  incredible
number of outdated, unmaintained packages,  and when you finally DO find
what you're looking for, you still have to trust what whomever put it on
the AUR is  trustworthy (or check through the source  code), compile it,
and  hope that  it will  still have  continued support  as new  versions
appear. It's just a mess.

Synology-
Don't buy one of these.
Seriously,  you will  be 100  percent better  off if  you instead  buy a
computer with similar specs and put headless Debian or Ubuntu on it. You
could  probably build  a much  higher powered  NAS/home server  with the
amount of  money that  you will  spend on  a Synology  box, and  all you
really get  in the tradeoff  is a nicer looking  box to sit  tucked away
somewhere and an admittedly very  user friendly web GUI. The DiskStation
OS is basically a lightweight  linux distro with enough modifications to
make it a huge pain to do anything outside of what Synology wants you to
do with it,  or install any packages outside of  Synology's very limited
repositories.  SSH  access  is  wonky,  you can  void  the  warranty  by
upgrading the RAM higher than 8 or 16 GB, it's just a mess.

As you can tell I'm kind of a nerd.
-Vx