Judson's Abstract Algebra: Theory and Applications is different in that it is an open source textbook that is available at no cost. I haven't used it (yet), but I think it's worth pointing out for the aforementioned reasons. In addition to PDF and source versions, there's a web version that has proofs collapsed by default (handy for high-level reading and for students who want to try proving the theorems themselves first) and live SageMath cells.
See also the MAA review by Christopher Thron.