The bell curve strikes again, proving that the simplest and most overcomplicated solutions somehow meet at the extremes of the intelligence spectrum. The minimalists on the left just want Notepad with syntax highlighting, the galaxy-brain folks on the right have transcended IDE bloat and returned to simplicity, while the middle is having a full meltdown demanding an IDE that probably writes their code, makes coffee, and predicts the future. The real comedy here is that both ends are objectively correct. You don't need a 2GB Electron app that takes 30 seconds to boot just to edit text files. But the middle section? They're convinced they need AI autocomplete, 47 extensions, a built-in browser, and probably a massage chair feature before they can write a single line of code. Meanwhile, Vim users are laughing in 0.001 seconds startup time.