OpenShot, Blender, and Vidcutter are recommended tools.
I am running Fedora 39. Openshot is available as a package, so "dnf install openshot" does the trick -- and pulls in Blender as a dependency.
Blender gets recommended for everything from 3D print design to video editing. I am wary of such a general purpose tool, expecting the "jack of all trades, master of none" to apply, in particular to video editing.
Vidcutter is a different story -- it is not available as a standard package, so rpmfusion or copr may be a possibility, or something else. This may be due to licensing and mpeg libraries. May there be a curse upon the people who license these libraries. We will ignore this package for now. There is a fedora package called "cutter", but it is a reverse engineering tool.
Other "FOSS" (free open source) tools are:
Adobe offers Premier Pro (any product must include "pro" in the name apparently, whether or not there is a "non-pro" version being offered). I had thought this might be included in my Creative Cloud subscription, but it ain't and there is no perpetual license available. A fellow I know who used to recommend it now says that he was irritated continually by bugs -- he now recommends DaVinci Resolve. To get this via the "cloud" would cost me $23 per month. That is $276 per year. For that money I could buy the more highly recommended DaVinci Studio and be done with it.
VSDC is free, but only for Windows or Mac.
Another fellow I know (AJ) uses Vegas Pro, the main thing he said about it is that you can pay once and buy a perpetual license. There are several plans, at a price around $200.
Another fellow I know says he uses Filmora 9 (swest). I see that now Filmora is up to "13".
Their website is glitsy, tangled, and confusing. There may be a free download. There is also a $50 per year plan, or a perpetual license for $80. Maybe. The free download will put a watermark on the generated video.Tom's Digital Photography Info / [email protected]