i've crossed in the opposite direction. i poked at debian but it wasn't any different materially from ubuntu or pop os. pop generally has been the best descendant of debian/ubuntu for gaming laptops i've found, but i got really fed up with a whole range of issues, debian, ubuntu, linux kernel, and gnome, and manjaro was just annoying with the setup.
arch has been as pleasant on my MSI bravo (which i had to sell to keep feeding myself while i work) and this old crappy lenovo ideapad 3.
several things that i have much preferred with arch is being able to set up a single efi partition with a single system partition on LUKS with only one password login, the "downgrade" program, which makes kernel management a dream, and cinnamon, i have tried several others, lxde, kde, mate, but cinnamon is just the best for a small display.
oh yeah, and i didn't mention wayland. i hate wayland, so much. wayland plus the recent version 6 kernels is such a mess, some kernels make outright garbage on the display, some don't let me change to other display modes, still others don't have working power management.
oh yeah and linux-hardened... i'm not tolerating any sniff of malware anymore after having several of my systems breached in recent months mainly by browser flaws. i had brave sync suddenly have a new unknown device appear on it. a youtube adblocker suddenly was being flagged as malware infected, and i do wonder now for how long. so i have also switched over to firefox and set it to lock everything down as well.
my system runs beautifully now, even on a 6.4 kernel, 20gb of ram with radeon APU and zram swap enabled, except for the nicer 144hz display and fast GPU i almost don't miss my bravo 15.