It'd be better if it languished in disuse, but unfortunately we're in the Really Fucking Shitty timeline.
Original fanbase and the Bethesda tourists hated each other for years, but there is a reason why the line in the sand was drawn with the release of the TV show.
As far as I am concerned, Bethesda's games aren't canon and neither is the TV show. I don't give a shit what they do, since none of it will ever impact the timeline of the franchise. I would sooner think up of some headcanon why Outer Worlds is canon to Fallout, as some sort of sequel to NV in the timeline where House makes space travel possible. Fan made content is the only thing decent the franchise has these days and Bethesda has nothing to do with it.
Re: President Eden
Enclave is actually really well portrayed in Fallout 3. Problem? The game barely tells you about the most important aspect of theirs in Fallout 3: The internal civil war. There is a reason why they're so disorganized and ineffective, Autumn has a massive bone to pick with Eden and by the time you get captured in Raven Rock, they don't see eye to eye anymore. When Autumn overrides Eden's orders, he creates a massive schism within the ranks and Eden declares open war against his own men. Why is that? Well, Autumn, as much of an asshole as he is, sees the purifier as means to take over the region and pacify it. He's basically doing what Enclave, as the remnants of pre-war government, should be doing all along and bringing back law and order, using the water as a bargaining tool to make the population bend the knee. Your average wastelander won't care if they get less rights and have to live under Enclave's heel as long as they get fed, they get water and safety in return. What's the alternative, becoming a slave? Living in a slum like Rivet City or Megaton? Dying out in the wastes to god knows what? Not like they had any political freedom before that point anyways. None of what Autumn does is pretty, but we can assume that he's not a genocidal maniac considering that this is why he has second doubts about Eden, who represents the original mission of The Enclave from Fallout 2 and is trying to do what Richardson was doing before The Oil Rig was blown up.
In a better written game, this would be the jump-off point to join sides with Eden and truly make The Enclave a joinable faction if you wanted to genocide everybody, destroying Brotherhood in the process. Autumn would be the alternative if you wanted to bring back government to the people, both sides have good reasons to side with them even if just for roleplaying purposes. Alas, Bethesda made it known that the reason why the story is so streamlined is because they were tired of "Oblivion's nuanced narrative"(lol) and wanted something more simple, so what they did was make Star Wars with Brotherhood being the rebels and Enclave being generic stormtroopers. Oh, and Todd added a mecha in there too, probably in honor of his toy transformer from his childhood or something. Shame that barely anyone will notice the schism in the ranks since Enclave are portrayed as generic goons you shoot on sight, if you want to you can even see how divided their ranks are by hacking into terminals at random outposts to see that soldiers and officers were basically send out in the middle of nowhere with no orders, hoping they're killed off. Probably Autumn loyalists Eden made sure to keep as far away from the real field work as possible, that being genocide camps where they round up random wastelanders and put them thru purity checks. You can guess what happens to them if they test negative, I guess not everyone at Raven Rock was up for that.
Oh well, if anyone wants a nuanced take on The Enclave they can at least download America Rising 2 mod for Fallout 4. Fans are doing what Bethesda won't, as they always have.