Neovim. It's an awesome editor and it has a great community and ecosystem.
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
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Definitely OpenFOAM. It competes with commercial software that costs thousands of dollars.
Suricata
For games:
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Anuto TD (found a few days ago, isn't super feature rich but still fun to kill time)
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Mindustry (never played a game like it before, ended up supporting by buying it on Steam)
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Supertuxkart (I love how many custom add-on karts and tracks I have)
For non-games:
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Termux (allows me to get apk files and install Revancify for add free yt)
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VLC (I don't mind slow updates and have yet to switch mostly because I can't find anything better that isn't more complicated than it needs to be and/or is closed source)
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KDE Connect (I have almost always had problems with moving files from and to my desktop via cord)
I'd include something like Linux, but I personally feel that's kinda cheating because of how large it is compared to the others.
Currently OBS and Motrix
Linux, of course. But another one that I use all the time, and love to death, is SageMath. It's the perfect blend of mathematics and programming for me.
Linux, Tor, and the Ballistica game engine/BombSquad game (not fully open source as stuff used for sensitive data remains closed source ๐)
Edit: forgot git lol
vim
uhh probably uhh AOSP and calyx os
Media Player Classic (I'm unsure if the latest iterations are or even if the Home Cinema edition is open source), TOR, qbittorrent, firefox, thinderbird, obs to name a few that I use regularly.
Linux, Firefox, Apache
Qemu/kvm
Right now, it's Warpinator. Makes at-home wireless file transfers so damn SIMPLE.
ShareX and it isn't even close