As a 5-year+ Fedora user, 28-year+ Linux user: Fedora is simple for many, but it is
not for beginners.
A beginner doesn't need to know anything that other operating systems do as part of their informed defaults, such as:
- Encrypting your data, or not.
- "Crypt? That sounds vampiric"
- Using command-line commands to copy and paste (or understand) in order to be able to stream Netflix
- "What is a codec? What are you talking about?"
- Leaving you to use the new system to your own perusals and fix "hey, is any device not performing as expected?" on your own terminal
- "Where is The Web?"
- "Why graphics flicker? Why can't I click-a-button fix it?"
Mint is not a Windows emulator, it is a very fine linux distribution that can cope with the most demanding expert uses, and does the above very finely. They ask you whether you want to watch nextflix or not (in that language), and they have a very fine, scholarly and gentle(wo)manly welcome step-by-step guide that acts for you on a click of a button and in your own, pedestrian terms.
That's a beginner friendly distribution. As in beginner to computers, not beginner to Linux. Many beginners to Linux may know more operating system concepts than most current Linux users.
Fedora project forces itself away from beginner (computer) users because they deliberately took a specific stance around free and open source licenses and a very specific position about copyrighted software that prevents the system to ship the
stuff that would enable them to implement the points (2) and (3)