Recs.
Updated
SpecsUpdate
Pros
Pro Easy to use rolling release distro
Stays up to date and includes all the perks of arch linux without the extra effort to install. Plus it looks really clean and modern.
Pro Surprisingly stable Linux desktop
From popular distros of rolling and standard releases, compared to Debian (stable) and Arch, Antergos stability rocks. Debian is stable, however, it's with old packages and Arch. The only thing that broke it, so far, was compiz-manjaro (C++ 0.9 branch) from AUR, but compiz in Antergos repositories is 0.8 and it is working flawlessly.
Pro Excellent graphical package manager (Pamac)
Features include: providing notifications of available updates; mirror management; AUR support (with the option to suppress unnecessary confirmations during the install process); update settings (frequency, whether to check for updates from the AUR, packages to ignore updates for); and a history of packages installed, updated, or removed (from the official repositories - AUR packages are not currently tracked).
Pro Rolling release model make it easy to keep apps on updated versions
Antergos is a rolling release distribution (as it's based on Arch Linux). Your entire system, from the base OS components to the applications that you install, will receive updates as they are released upstream—with only a minimal delay to ensure stability.
Cons
Con Uses MB to align partitons and this is wrong but others are also guilty of this.
Your partitions will be out of alignment if you partition with anything other than gdisk or parted if you don't believe me then install normal then check partitions with parted. Partitions should be aligned with MiB which is not the same as MB.