Whether some distributions have jumped the gun or not it remains a good reason. No harm for the lot of ones in that list that are more delivery mechanisms or development versions themselves though.
For the ones that are green they tend to be development versions (e.g. Alpine Edge, ALT Sisyphus, LiGurOS develop), rolling releases where there aren't necessarily those kind of package stability/interop guarantees in the first place (e.g. Arch, Manjaro, OpenSuse Tumbleweed), or not actually distros at all just alternative download mechanisms (e.g. Chocolatey, Chromebrew, Homebrew, Scoop). There are very few (such as Fedora 40) that just happen to be "broken clock" status for the moment because they are very fresh spins.
For the ones that are red, they are the examples of why you don't want to rely on the built in package at the moment. Even for the ones that are green "for the moment" (such as the Fedora 40 example) it's often still considered better to use the latest "master" copy of zig (depending what you're doing with it) than the last milestone release even then.
For the ones that are green they tend to be development versions (e.g. Alpine Edge, ALT Sisyphus, LiGurOS develop), rolling releases where there aren't necessarily those kind of package stability/interop guarantees in the first place (e.g. Arch, Manjaro, OpenSuse Tumbleweed), or not actually distros at all just alternative download mechanisms (e.g. Chocolatey, Chromebrew, Homebrew, Scoop). There are very few (such as Fedora 40) that just happen to be "broken clock" status for the moment because they are very fresh spins.
For the ones that are red, they are the examples of why you don't want to rely on the built in package at the moment. Even for the ones that are green "for the moment" (such as the Fedora 40 example) it's often still considered better to use the latest "master" copy of zig (depending what you're doing with it) than the last milestone release even then.