Dear Ancor Gonzalez Sosa, Please don't go the route of the Anaconda installer. I have tried this several times (with an overview screen, then click on an icon to configure a certain part). This is not a pleasant experience. The most straightforward is the regular flow with X number of screens. However in that case you will either: - hide the more advanced screens to not annoy beginning users, making it harder for more advanced users - show advanced screens, possibly confusing beginning users This can easily be solved by having 2 flows: 1) A easy flow that selects all the defaults, where you only make choices about your language, keyboard layout, locale, timezone (mostly these 4 are related) and your favorite desktop environment. And maybe a minimal install versus complete installation choice. In this flow you will want to make partitioning as straightforward as possible. So dual boot vs. whipe everything is enough. 2) A advanced flow, that moves you through all possible configuration options like partitioning, selecting patterns (gaming, office, graphics, coding), preferences like rpm-based or mostly flatpak-based software, networking setup, et cetera. You can also start the advanced flow with an 'index' page where you select the configuration pages that you want to adjust. By not selecting a certain page, your installation will be configured conform the default settings. I would try to go that route.