They make a subvolume for every traditional unix partition and the system takes automated snapshots so you can rollback the system to older configurations. I don't actually run opensuse but I've dabbled with it specifically to see how they setup btrfs and you can just tell they're invested in it.
Scoopta
I hope one of the things they do is make better use of subvolumes. If you look at the way SUSE handles btrfs it's night and day compared to everyone else.
Yours is down below? Mine is under a separate section entirely lol. Every app has gotta put the "sidebar" in a different place. I wonder if the different web UIs move it around too 🤔.

This reminds me of this lol... unrelated but still funny

... That's quite the acronym...what?
Ooohh nice. That's a beast of a system. Although mine isn't a slouch it doesn't quite compare to that. I have a 7950X, 10TB of total NVMe but with raid it's only 5TB, 64GB of ram...and my 5700 XT.
Damn, nice. That's the card I keep telling myself I should upgrade to. I have a 5700 XT and I really like it but I kinda want something newer with more power
Just avoid Nvidia to start with?
I don't get it? When has this ever fixed a bug? Compiler error sure? But a bug?
...that's a terrifying but also plausible prospect. Guess it's a reason not to use the published app and instead build it yourself.
...yeah and if they went to signal to ask about you they're going to provide signal your phone number as it's the only identifier they have in their system...so the nation state already had that to begin with, it isn't sensitive info despite what it can be used for.
You can snapshot them independently and if you want you can set quotas to size restrict them. Although that latter point defeats one of the advantages of subvolumes over partitions. So really just the ability to snapshot them independently