For years, my terminal editor of choice was nano. It came preinstalled on most of the Linux machines I touched, the keybindings were printed at the bottom of the screen, and I could open a config file, change a value, and be on my way. It worked, and that was about as much thought as I gave it. Neovim was always lurking in the background as a thing for terminal weirdos who’d memorized hieroglyphs, and I was perfectly content not being one of them.