Woops! My bad. I need to be more careful what I say.
From GPT 4o:
There are no definitive stats on Wayland vs. Xorg usage across all Linux systems, but we can estimate based on distribution defaults and user preferences.
### **Wayland vs. Xorg Usage Estimate (2025)**
- **Wayland likely holds 40-50% of Linux desktop usage**, growing but not yet a majority.
- **Xorg still used in ~50-60% of systems**, particularly on distros where it's the default or necessary for compatibility.
### **Breakdown by Major Distros:**
| **Distribution** | **Default Display Server** | **User Adoption Estimate** |
|----------------------|---------------------------|---------------------------|
| Fedora (GNOME) | Wayland | ~90% Wayland |
| Ubuntu (GNOME) | Wayland (X fallback) | ~70% Wayland |
| Debian | Xorg | ~80% Xorg |
| Arch Linux | User choice (Xorg common) | ~60% Xorg |
| KDE Plasma (6+) | Wayland (default in some) | ~50% Wayland |
| XFCE, LXQt, MATE, Cinnamon | Xorg (no Wayland support) | ~100% Xorg |
| Pop!_OS, Mint, etc. | Xorg by default | ~90% Xorg |
### **Key Factors:**
- **Fedora and Ubuntu's shift to Wayland** has pushed adoption significantly.
- **KDE Plasma has improved Wayland support**, so adoption is rising, but many users still prefer Xorg for stability.
- **Lightweight DEs (XFCE, MATE, LXQt, Cinnamon) have no Wayland support**, keeping Xorg relevant.
- **NVIDIA driver improvements (GBM support)** are making Wayland more viable.
### **Conclusion:**
Wayland adoption is growing, but Xorg still dominates in many use cases. By 2026-2027, **Wayland may surpass Xorg**, but currently, Xorg likely still holds the slight majority.
Just from these few posts today, though, I definitely can see the issues and why it would be so hard to do.
I'm on Arch and have been using Wayland almost from the beginning.
Thank you!
Stephen