I find myself building isos less and less.
It is not that it is difficult to do so occasionally, but from perspective of hobby, learning/education, community help/collaboration, up-to-date and reliable installation, and even ease of reliable install, a build script release format is more convenient and certainly more powerful, simpler (for users and developers alike), yet more flexible.
An iso requires special restrictive handling, needing the likes of Ventoy or specially crafted boot loader configs with issues regarding guaranteed persistence capability. Alternatively you need to extract the contents, which become out-of-date immediately the iso is released...
A build script, on the other hand, can prepare an always most up-to-date release and can be arranged and provided to auto-config everything in a single but flexible step.
Most important is the inherent sharing of otherwise hidden-knowlege. Like open-source more generally, a build script shows in detail how the distro is constructed, which via that open-ness improves security and makes the release dynamic, flexible and alive and able to be manipulated, security checked, developed and improved.
Good riddance to old read-only isos, which are always out-of-date, or will be tomorrow, static dead storage-consuming old snap-shots. With a little build script release instead, I can at the push of an Enter key, re-install a brand new version with bug and security fixes and any modification, addition, or enhancement available or developed. A living distro release, transparent, visible, dynamic - not just an old archive that is already dead like all black-box-like isos.
There is nothing easier than running a single build script in terms of true convenience. An iso release, on the other hand, not only requires special, fundamentally restrictive handling, but is but a stale pre-packaged snapshot - a case of dead and soon rotting fruit whose contents are effectively unknown except to its creator. Really an iso is just another product handed out to a consumer public; aside from the complex insecure process of 'remastering' the already unknown contents, an iso is inevitably yet just another throw-away consumer product.
The likes of Ventoy is just a temporary, painful, hack arrangement that wrongly encourages prolonging the use of old, inconveniently static and dead, insecure old products. So much effort trying to keep what is already dead, alive!... Old archived isos are just museum pieces, but more often than not, most no longer of use or significance even for the most nostalgic. Unlike a piece of art, their archives, most of them, consume incredible space on all our systems world wide. A huge cost in the energy and resources required to continually produce and archive them away for posterity... clogging the storage space of future generations that will never want them. The consumer disease we call 'hoarding' - junk by any other name. Disposable Vapes.