I love Antergos (I'm typing this on it), but I would recommend Mint or Ubuntu for your first foray into Linux.
Antergos isn't difficult to install, it's not hard to use. Where Antergos (and Arch) fails for new people is stability, documentation and troubleshooting. Arch, and Antergos is bleeding edge, it's not a matter of when an update with bork something, but a matter of when. I'm not saying it's unstable, I find it better than Win10 by a long shot, but when it does, someone new has no point of reference of where to even start looking for help when something goes wrong, they do not know the right terms yet. When they do find help, the help is often in code.
Ubuntu and Mint are a bit down the line on updates and therefore a bit more stable, there is more people looking for help using similar terms to what someone new would use, and Ubuntu and it's users do a pretty good job of explaining things in ways they will understand. Ubuntu has a reputation of being for noobs, it's stable, it works, just because it's not hardcore enough doesn't make it a noob OS, there are more servers running Ubuntu Server than there are running Arch for this very reason. Ubuntu is for everyone, noobs and experts alike, while Antergos and Arch are more for Linux gurus and sadists people who love a challenge.
The whole point of trying this is to see if it's something you like and can handle, starting with something difficult or has some weird bug isn't going to give you the best impression. Start simple. Figure out if it works, find what you like, then push forward.