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linux_gaming

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Ashiette , in How is powerplans/performance modes handled in laptops running linux compared to windows?

It’s very good - in some cases better than Windows. I have a MSI gaming laptop. The battery lifedin longer on linux compared to Windows.

With custom scripts you can control fan speed. However… I have a intel/nVidia card on KDE with wayland and it is hell. Nothing works as expected, so I can’t tell about gaming in itself.

For other tasks, it works really well.

caustictrap OP ,

More battery life means the cpu is power limited compared to windows + armoury crate performance mode?

Spur4383 ,

Or that the CPU is not doing needles add servings.

PeachMan ,
@PeachMan@lemmy.world avatar

It probably means that there are fewer useless background processes eating up your battery

If you’re asking about gaming performance on Linux, then the answer is that it depends on the game. Some run better on Linux (Cyberpunk made headlines recently) and some run worse.

Edit: ah, you’re asking any Armory Crate because they have the performance modes. That’s just overclocking. You can do that on Linux, but it won’t be as easy as using Armory Crate.

Ashiette ,

No, I have also found that my processes run faster on Linux than on Windows. I don’t know what is armoury crate but from the way you’re talking about it it manages CPU modes.

Whatever you do in Windows, you can in Linux (almost). But it is sometimes harder, sometimes simpler.

ProtonBadger ,

I'm lucky that I don't need long battery life, I'm always plugged in for gaming, so I have set the Nvidia GPU in Dedicated mode. I suspect not having both (optimus or prime) have eliminated a lot of issues, it works well with Wayland and Plasma and games like BG3 and Guildwars2 under Proton+Xwayland.

Actually it's not too bad on the battery when not gaming, despite always running NVidia.

Ashiette ,

I have to ask… on KDE wayland, how do you set it to dedicated mode ?

minamoog , in Why do you use Linux?
@minamoog@lemmy.world avatar

i had a dream about switching to linux, then woke up to a windows update

lordgoose , in Why do you use Linux?

I initially switched because I heard about Windows planning to drop support for Windows 10 and I knew that Windows 11 was slow as hell so I jumped ship. I stayed because I really like the customizability and all the options Linux affords me as well as being able to just… switch distros if one company does something I don’t like. Being able to update when I want to is also amazing.

SimplyTadpole , in Why do you use Linux?
@SimplyTadpole@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

1) I’m disillusioned with and sick of Windows. I’ve been in there since the days of XP and 7, back then those systems could take a crapload of abuse from my young clueless arse prone to downloading hundreds of malware, yet still be functioning largely flawlessy. Hell, even Vista and 8 were still quite resilient, and I say this as someone who used Vista for 2 years. Meanwhile, Windows 10 completely falls apart if I so much as look at it wrong, and I never had a W10 installation last longer than 6 months without falling apart with bizarre bug after bizarre bug (such as leaving me completely unable to open any image files) - and this is without my past proneness to getting malware. I don’t have the patience for that anymore, and then 11 comes in adding ads to the start menu and I just can’t anymore.

2) I’ve come to appreciate how Linux handles some things better - mostly with regards to Flatpaks and their self-containment making it less risky to run some things and easier to keep track of what I have installed. I find it’s also easier to deal with backups on Linux than Windows, especially with Kinoite (and I heard Tumbleweed also does a good job at it with snapper, too). In general I feel safer when using Linux, but on Windows I’m always paranoid about downloading a virus again - and with how brittle 10 is…

3) I don’t really like monopolies and don’t like the idea of Microsoft becoming basically synonymous with computers (and Apple isn’t any better).

It’s not perfect, mind you, and I do still feel many frustrations with Linux (I had to deal with Steam stopping working for no reason lately, but at least I could rollback to an earlier version), but I’ve genuinely not had much better luck with 10 at this point.

MrBungle , in Why do you use Linux?

I always wanted to learn. I had a number of failed attempts with Linux back in 2000, 2006, etc. I always gave it a shot every 5 years ago just to see.

I fully made the switch with pop os a couple years ago and it ended up sticking. I was in a better place to learn linux and pop os is just easy and noob friendly. This last time was also spurned on when the rumour was going around that windows 11 was going to have ads right in the explorer. I don’t know if that ever happened but it was enough to get me to give it another shot haha

Kaldo ,
@Kaldo@kbin.social avatar

You stuck with popOS ever since? Had any issues or had to reinstall after switching or was it smooth sailing pretty much?

MrBungle ,

Mostly smooth. When I jumped onto pop os I think it was the 21.10 version which was good. Only the ng that I never got working was lutris. When 22.04 was released I updated to that and had some weirdness afterwards that I couldn’t quite iron out. I ended up doing a fresh install with 22.04 and it’s been great since.

Kaldo ,
@Kaldo@kbin.social avatar

Nice, thanks. I've been (slowly) preparing to switch, for me its probably gonna be mint at first but if that doesnt pan out popOs sounds like a good fallback.

FluffyPotato , (edited ) in Why do you use Linux?

Windows 10 shit the bed and needed a reinstall so I went through all the steps needed to get it just right again in my head. I realized it’s gonna take me most of the day and I installed pop OS instead, that was like 2 years ago and I haven’t looked back.

rah , in Why do you use Linux?
juipeltje , in Why do you use Linux?
@juipeltje@lemmy.world avatar

It started with me being creeped out with all the privacy settings everytime i reinstalled windows 10, wanting my fricking handwriting data and all that, then i saw a LTT video from anthony where he talked about trying linux instead of windows 11, and seeing previous LTT videos about gaming becoming doable on linux. I had tried linux before as a kid on my laptop, ubuntu and linux mint, but i didn’t really get it at the time. I decided to follow anthony’s recommendation and tried pop os. I was impressed with how far linux had come with playing games, but i also didn’t realize how usable linux was in general for a desktop user. I quickly went down the rabbithole after that because i really liked how customizable linux was, so i went to arch linux, i ended becoming a tiling window manager user, making some simple scripts, running windows virtualized with single gpu passthrough, and now i’ve been using void linux for a few months. I’m really happy LTT made those videos cause otherwise i wouldn’t be here now.

Dark_Arc , in Why do you use Linux?
@Dark_Arc@social.packetloss.gg avatar

I use Linux because I got frustrated with Windows and decided that in my opinion, something as fundamental as an operating system should never be closed source.

I don’t mind some software, (e.g., a game store), being closed source.

I support Valve in particular because A) they have the games I want and B) because they’ve done more than any other company to improve the drivers on Linux (which is the operating system I bailed to following my distaste for Windows).

It’s worth noting, I do use Windows to play some games, but I actually use two computers to do it. I use Moonlight and Sunshine. My Linux computer continues to be “my computer” and the Windows machine is effectively a LAN console/gaming computer that I interact with via my computer.

Basically you don’t have to be an absolutionist to support free software … and free software desktops are worth using not just because they’re free, but because they’re genuinely better at getting the job done.

Defaced , in Why do you use Linux?

A very simple reason, I use Linux because when I use Linux I feel like my computer is mine and mine alone, when I use Windows I feel like I’m leasing my PC from Microsoft and I have no control over the OS. I’d rather own my PC from hardware all the way up to the software.

AnarchistArtificer , in Why do you use Linux?

I work in science and at university, I was noticing that increasingly often, the kinds of computational work I was doing worked better on Linux. Often, there’d be software that would ostensibly run in Linux and Windows, but the Windows documentation and community would be pretty sparse.

The more I learned, the clearer it became that switching over properly to Linux was the way to go. It just provides better infrastructure. As an example, an area of science I feel passionately about is FAIR data principles, a list of guidelines on how we can make scientific data more Findable, Accessible, Interactible and Reusable. In practice, for me, this means I’ve gotten very good at using containers, which I found much easier on Linux

Fjor , in Why do you use Linux?

Because it’s an honest system

jntesteves , (edited ) in How is powerplans/performance modes handled in laptops running linux compared to windows?
@jntesteves@lemmy.world avatar

I believe the platform power profiles are standard nowadays and coded in the bios, so Linux should have access to them just like Windows does. You can use the powerprofilesctl command to list and change power profiles. Gnome also has a Power Mode switcher on the top menu, it’s the same thing.

I can talk of my experience with the 2021 Asus ROG Strix G15, I have 3 power profiles:

  • performance: Power limits to max; Aggressive fan curve with speed limit to max. Generally loud fans. I need this to play demanding games in the summer.
  • balanced: Power limits to max; Moderate fan curve with a medium limit. Great perf (under sane ambient temp), while not too loud.
  • power-saver: Lowered power limits; Quiet fans.

Those seem to correlate exactly with the power profiles in Armoury Crate: Turbo, Balanced and Silent respectively. I don’t think there’s any performance being left on the table.

Gaming laptops with AMD CPU + AMD dGPU are a great suit for Linux gaming.

Also, AMD GPUs benefit a lot from undervolting, which is safe to do. It’s free performance. I’ve made a simple systemd service to keep the undervolt always active: https://codeberg.org/jntesteves/amdgpu-tune

DumbAceDragon , in Why do you use Linux?
@DumbAceDragon@sh.itjust.works avatar
merthyr1831 , in Why do you use Linux?

Steam/Valve investing in Linux has thankfully made non-steam gaming on Linux better than ever! Proton and WINE have made it easy for the average Linux user to set up games from GoG, Humble Bundle, etc. without needing to beg a developer to release a shoddy port.

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