MX Linux is the only way to go, I've said before I've been through a number of distros, some more than once, including arch.
MX Linux has the added bonus of being able to choose either init or systemd, init being the default.
They use default applications that are actually decent, and everything works out of the box.
It is based on debian stable, but also includes an MX test repo and the debian backport repo, as default repos in the package manager. It's very easy to add other repos and enable/disable them when needed.
There is a little issue that amd graphic card users (hand up) have, occasionally it drops off the amdgpu driver when upgrading the kernels, which leaves you with a black screen after upgrading. This has only happened 2-3 times in the 4? years I've been using it as my daily. Solution is to change the line in grub that forces amdgpu instead of radeon, back to radeon, get back in, install the driver you need, and change it back to amdgpu again.
Other than that, the only issues I've had have been completely my fault, because I like playing a little too much for my own good. It's easy to just reinstall, preserving the home partition (I have always used a separate home partition), and you are ready to go again.