I like it! It's more systemd-free than Devuan for cry'n out loud (that is, if it's important to you that there's absolutely not a single molecule of systemd in your OS). It is still available for 32-bit machines in spite of it's Debian base.
Ultra-lightweight, yet still keeps the mighty MX tools that make life easy. I can make a bootable iso of my installed system - with all my applications, files, and settings preserved as a personal backup - or without the files if I want to make it shareable with others.
It's philosophically "purer" than it's sibling, MX-Linux, which since MX-25 has given more and more ground to "creep" from systemd - just as Devuan has. I get it, and I don't mind little bits of systemd that are needed to make things work. But antiX (and for that matter, PCLinuxOS as well) is proof that such compromise is not really necessary.