

Somewhat like it, but with different operational goals.
FreeBSD focuses on wide hardware compatibility and very high speed.
OpenBSD focuses on security, exclusively. It’s slower and with a narrower range of supported hardware, but a MUCH higher effort in security, assurance and audit.
So, the fact that some bugs have been found in FreeBSD is more or less irrelevant to the security of OpenBSD
You may not be aware, but find it interesting that MacOS is also a BSD variant, and there was a distro called NetBSD which was (is?) focused on what you’d expect from the name of it.
Another thing you might not know is that the OpenBSD folks also publish OpenSSH which is a very well regarded and widely used package.
Of course all software is subject to bugs/error/vulnerabilities and OpenSSH as well as OpenBSD are constantly being reviewed, revised and audited for potential security issues.
I have found the large 4-cup moka pot to be very efficient for camping coffee, particularly if you also have a kettle on the griddle with hot/near-boilng water for refills. Or in the campfire. I use an aluminum calphalon non-whistle teapot for that.
With a good single-burner (butane/propane or white gas) it becomes reasonable to crank out good coffee for 2-3 people at a time (1.5 to 2 cup) on a ~6 minute cycle.
Uhh maybe my use case is atypical, but still. Moka-pot is good for camping cuz it’s fast, easy-clean and can produce great results.