I have an ASUS ROG that came with Windows 12 11 pre-installed. I tried using it once and it pissed me off so bad I haven’t opened the laptop again. I want to switch to a Linux distro that’s compatible with it but need the process explained like you would to Grandma trying to bank online. Are there any resources that break it WAY down? Like, starting just after turning the computer on (I’ve got that down already).
Edit to say: it has been pointed out that Windows 12 does not, in fact, exist and I may or may not be posting this from the future.
Just a note, the person just gave you a link for Debian, which is one of the main distributions. However there’s many others, as there isn’t a single Linux (OS), so you may want to check what you prefer.
Debian-based distributions have the best program support, at least for some of the proprietary stuff. “Download for Linux” in those cases means you get a .deb file which should work fine on these distros.
I personally recommend Linux Mint for most cases.
Oh, and you may have a bit of issue with drivers, especially if it’s a newly released laptop. That’s the software that makes hardware work properly with the OS. Ubuntu and Linux Mint (which is based on Ubuntu) have graphical driver manager which may come in handy.