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Get your priorities straight. Picking a distro to stick with becomes a lot easier that way.
To give an example of how I dealt with this myself in the past.
Number 1 priority for me was and still is security. I'm willing to give up performance and convenience for the sake of security. A shortlist of distros that in some capacity suffice: Fedora, openSUSE, Gentoo, Arch(/Artix), Alpine, Void, Spectrum OS, Qubes OS, Kicksecure, Whonix, Tails.
However...:
So Fedora, Kicksecure and openSUSE remain. While Kicksecure (arguably) has superior defaults (when it comes to security), it is still a relatively small project compared to juggernauts like Fedora and openSUSE, so I was inclined to dismiss it unless Fedora and openSUSE weren't able to keep up. Then I learned about how both Fedora and openSUSE had so-called immutable variants, so I got interested in those and what they had to offer. And even though they were still a bit crude, unpolished and kinda finicky to work with; the promise and potential was clearly there. I was especially amused by how Fedora's
rpm-ostree
enabled one to forego unknown states, bitrot, configuration drift etc and was a very serious step-up compared to all the other options. Soon after I realized that I had found the distro and the rest is history... Since, I've obviously found other distros that had some interesting things going on, however none of them (besides the promise of Vanilla OS' 2.0) has been able to deliver in terms of security and reproducibility. So for me it's still rather clear cut.In your case, to me at least, it seems you're inherently attracted towards stable distros (like Debian) but lust after rolling release due to the newer packages they offer. So in your case I'd actually recommend the following: