There is plenty of stuff, Disk Utility (actually gnome-disk-utility, so it should be available on all systems with gnome-desktop) is simply the thing most linux users will have installed
by default which does the job.
And Disk Utility and other tools makes it very easy to list and manage all your disks while also hooking into mkfs to support formatting a disk to any filesystem format, manage partition sizes, and do a lot of other things Rufus was never designed for.
Generic tools are more useful in my mind than tools targeted to only do one specific facet. Rufus is a disk
formatter, other tools are disk
managers.
Hey, personally I just use what works, and is easiest to access,
preferably stuff built into the system anyway. (With a slight preference for CLI stuff.) But if you happen to specifically like the GUI of Rufus, I cannot argue with that.