this post was submitted on 18 Feb 2026
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I learned recently that cinnamon was a fork of gnome from when gnome went shitty. I personally jumped to xfce without knowing about cinnamon until recently.
And I switched from xubuntu to mint when snap took over, because mint explicitly said they wouldn't use snap.
It seems like mint is a refuge for the people who run away from shitty decisions made by other Linux projects. Keep up the good work.
Cinnamon is not a “fork” of GNOME. MATE is a fork of GNOME as MATE started from GNOME source code.
Cinnamon was a reaction to GNOME 3. But Cinnamon was written from scratch to reflect a more traditional desktop metaphor. It was not created from existing GNOME code.
In the days of GTK 3, Cinnamon shipped quite a few of the default GNOME apps. Later, when GTK4/ libadwaita appeared, Cinnamon stayed with GTK3 and formed the XApps project which did fork many GNOME apps to stay on GTK3. XApps was meant to be a cross-desktop project serving all the GTK desktop environments.
These days, Cinnamon is trying to fork libadwaita to make GTK4 apps look better on their desktop.
In general, Cinnamon is fairly conservative. They are the last major desktop environment to default to X11 for example (though you will disagree with that view if you count XFCE as one of the major DEs).
Many parts of Cinnamon were forked from Gnome 3 and Gnome 2 (Mate).
Many other parts of Cinnamon are made from scratch, but it is not wrong the say it's also a Gnome 3 fork in many ways.