At this point the project is a decade old, with no signs of ever getting more stable in the next one.
I am not saying this is bad for the language itself, I can understand the goal of getting it "right".
But for a language aiming to be a C replacement/alternative it seems to fail to understand that C being a language that barely changed over our lives is one of the core reasons for its success.
That stability makes accepting its compromises and design shortfalls easier.