I would say the Emacs user mindshare has shifted somewhat to Doom. There are a lot of Doom fans on r/emacs now, and the Discord is huge compared to what it was. Many new contributors are cropping up. Even some developers of well-known packages, like org-roam, have switched to Doom. Take it from him, not me! https://blog.jethro.dev/posts/migrating_to_doom_emacs/
Compared to Spacemacs, which has complex abstraction layers over Emacs, Doom seems to be much lighter. It's easy to get into Emacs browsing Doom's modules. Plus, the BDFL model is serving Doom quite well since Henrik is a god-tier BDFL. He's constantly active and keeps Doom very focused on performance with sensible defaults and consistent programming style. Docs are a focus and are growing, and they're extremely comfortable to browse in Doom Emacs itself, as well as the Doom and Emacs source code of course.
None of this is meant to attack Spacemacs, it did and does much for Emacs, and many swear by it. But I would say Doom is better these days.
Yeah, I was aware of that but the way I wrote it was ambiguous, sorry. I meant “even some people who have the chops to maintain complex custom configs are switching to Doom”.
Compared to Spacemacs, which has complex abstraction layers over Emacs, Doom seems to be much lighter. It's easy to get into Emacs browsing Doom's modules. Plus, the BDFL model is serving Doom quite well since Henrik is a god-tier BDFL. He's constantly active and keeps Doom very focused on performance with sensible defaults and consistent programming style. Docs are a focus and are growing, and they're extremely comfortable to browse in Doom Emacs itself, as well as the Doom and Emacs source code of course.
None of this is meant to attack Spacemacs, it did and does much for Emacs, and many swear by it. But I would say Doom is better these days.