Recently I found a really good minimalist window manager. I'm very much a functionalist and a minimalist, which is why I got into *nix systems in the first place; sadly Windows has become extremely bloated even on a bare-bones install (I still dual boot, but my HDD-based Win10 install is just slower than molasses). Anyway, dwm is a part of the suckless.org software set, and it is really nice. Unfortunately for me, I installed it via repo instead of building it (yeah, I know. I'm still mostly used to Windows' methodology of not building packages, although I did recently bite the bullet and build MakeMKV). I'm very aware of how often I screw up instructions and I've broken many OS installs messing around, so I try my best to steer clear of building and installing packages. It's an excellently-coded window manager: tags for virtual desktops, auto-tiling, low resource use, an actual toolbar (one of my gripes against fluxbox), and generally keyboard-driven, which is my kind of thing. It's flaws (for vanilla builds) is that dwm-tools is a necessary accessory, volume control via keyboard is missing, and I have issues with starting Guild Wars in it. GW1 works fine in Xfce, but I suspect some hardware acceleration or something is not turning on in dwm to allow drawing the window. Civ5 via Steam still works fine, though. And by default there is no status monitor for battery, network, volume, etc. that "regular" WMs have. It's a separate install, or a script, which in my experience is just an insane loop that isn't worth the trouble since my tmux setup (which I usually have open for volume) has that stuff covered. The other flaw I've noticed is that since the meta or control key or whatever is Alt, it will override application Alt shortcuts. Honestly it would be nigh perfect if I fixed the volume control and status monitor issues. I just wish the base had just a little bit more included: I personally think nobody in their right mind would not want some sort of volume control included.