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linux_gaming

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gnuplusmatt , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.

Fedora or Nobara if you’re lazy are a good option. If an immutable variant appeals, I have a good time on Kinoite. There is a gaming centric ublue version now too IIRC

sugar_in_your_tea , in Linux Gaming beyond Steam: Building native support for GOG, Epic, and more

Looks like TL;DW - rewrite Heroic in Rust, and rearchitect it a bit to more easily support other stores than GOG and EGS. There’s also an intro to other options.

knF ,

I was wondering why they wanted to rewrite it then I realised they are using electron…ouch!

sugar_in_your_tea ,

Eh, I think something like Electron makes a lot of sense, but maybe they’ll go with tauri instead if it’s going to be written in Rust. The app itself isn’t really performance sensitive since it basically just launches games in another process, so using a web view isn’t really an issue, and could even be helpful in order to handle 2FA and whatnot.

So I wouldn’t expect them to rewrite with GTK+ or Qt or something, but who knows!

nitefox ,

I work with Electron daily, I swear it’s terrible and a pain in the ass for anything vaguely complex. They better go with Tauri for real

sugar_in_your_tea ,

Yeah, I use it at work too, and my personal projects use Tauri.

nitefox ,

I’m so sorry.

DLSantini , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.

Garuda or Chimera, depending on what you want, exactly.

heleos , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.

I use tumbleweed, but I had a strange issue with the flatpak version of heroic launcher. I ran a benchmark of cyberpunk 2077 with the flatpak heroic, and was averaging 100 fps. I had nixos installed on a separate hard drive and that benchmark was 160 fps. I thought there was an issue with opensuse, but I installed the flatpak version of heroic on nixos and also got 100 fps. So I installed the regular version on tumbleweed and have 160 fps. I would keep that in mind when looking at programs to launch games, whether it’s wine, bottles, heroic, lutris, etc

TrickDacy , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.

Pop OS works great for me. It’s Ubuntu minus snaps and imo some of the rough edges

davidisgreat ,

Plus it can support Nvidia out of the box.

TrickDacy ,

Good point. I had a lot of trouble with my Nvidia card before switching to pop os. I ended up switching to AMD anyhow, but the reason I even landed on pop os was this fact.

davidisgreat ,

I have a 2060 super. It has all the performance I currently need. I would like to buy a non nvidia graphics card but I can’t justify buying a new card for that reason alone.

hemko , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.

Debian is exactly pike Ubuntu, with all bullshit removed never added

Ibaudia , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.
@Ibaudia@lemmy.world avatar

Realistically just use what you prefer. The differences between distros, even when it comes to performance, are very small when it comes to gaming. The most important things IMO are good Wayland support, stability, and consistent updates.

onlinepersona , in Linux Gaming beyond Steam: Building native support for GOG, Epic, and more

There are just too many of these goddamn launchers.

That gave me a good laugh.

brenno , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.

Anyone that has video drivers and flatpak should work in your case. If you dislike Ubuntu and don’t like the direction, usually poops and mint are the ones recommended.

victorz , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.

I game on Arch, works great. Flatpak Steam, X11. 👍

Nilz ,

Why Flatpak over the multilib one? Would it be easy to switch to Flatpak Steam?

victorz ,

I dunno, just felt better not enabling a whole repo just for one app, so I went with the flatpak version.

Super easy, just install it and go. Just remember to also install the Proton flatpak package in order to enable running Windows games on Linux. And to enable it in the Steam settings. I don’t think there’s much else to it other than standard flatpak stuff, like things don’t work too great if the system GPU driver version is out of sync with the flatpak one. So if you upgrade one make sure to upgrade the other, etc.

Give it a whirl if you like, and if you bump into issues I might be able to help. We’ll see. 😅

the_q , in Workaround for broken Battle.net update 14542

For folks using Lutris and confused by where to type this in here are some instructions:

System Options → Environment variables → Add the following:

Key: WINE_SIMULATE_WRITECOPY Value: 1

Good luck!

TheCheddarCheese , in First time seeing Devs respond to a lack of anti-cheat support on Linux
@TheCheddarCheese@lemmy.world avatar

why do so many anticheats not allow linux?

SeekPie ,

What I’ve heard is that they don’t think that it’s a big enough market to have to fix bugs that might happen only on linux and such, so they just don’t allow is to play.

sanpo ,

It’d be nice, but from what I see most devs against this suggest Linux gamers are a bunch of dirty hackers and it’s somehow much easier to cheat there.

They just conveniently forget that Valve offered to fix any bugs themselves that are specific to Linux/Proton…

krellor ,

Most threads I've seen lately about gaming on Linux have explicitly been about sharing config tips for pirated repacks. I'm not saying it's necessarily representative, but there is the impression that a good number of the already small Linux footprint is pirating the games, so why would a dev make that easier? I get that too some extent some folks might buy the game, ruin into issues, and then try a repack. But it feels like there is a sizable community that just pirates the game.

sanpo ,

The discussion is about anti-cheat, so piracy is not relevant here.

And no, there isn’t that impression.
Statistics from Humble Bundles and such have always shown that Linux gamers are willing to pay more than any other platform.

krellor ,

Plenty of games with anticheat have been pirated, like elden ring. I'm just saying that some devs might view not working on Linux as a feature not a bug, if they have the perception that a high proportion of Linux users are using repacks. There are some extremely vocal minorities in the FOSS world that could create that impression.

In any case, nice to see this dev look into the issue. I have my oldest boys using steam deck so the more compatibility the better.

EuroNutellaMan ,
@EuroNutellaMan@lemmy.world avatar

I’m just saying that some devs might view not working on Linux as a feature not a bug

Those devs are exactly the reason why we’d pirate their game with anti-cheats. Not only because the pirated version may work compared to the official one but also, in this case, as a deserved fuck you to the developer.

I’m someone who typically endorses piracy (with the caveat that you should support the people who make the content if you can afford to) yet I will also be the first to straight up buy or not play a game rather than pirating it if it works well on Linux because I think it should be rewarded. And according to Humble Bundle it would seem Linux users pay more than others, so if a specific game is pirated a lot more than acerage on linux then perhaps the problem isn’t the Linux community but the game itself and a good dev would see that and fix their game.

Without mentioning that piracy, as stated by Nintendo and other companies, can actually sometimes help a game (for example if said pirate then talks about the game to others who may buy it, or if they then buy it after trying it and liking it).

Either way this is about anti-cheat, not DRM and anti-piracy. And even more-so by automatically excluding every Linux user you’re also excluding those that would have paid, that’s literally shooting yourself in the foot as pirates wouldn’t have paid you regardless (of course with exceptions) but some users would have and you stopped them from doing that with your move.

SeekPie ,

Maybe the pirated version does work on linux while the official doesn’t. For example if you wnat to play Rust on linux you have to play on non-EAC servers which are a lot more common on the cracked versions (for anyone trying to run official version of Rust, you can still connect to cracked servers that have their own Anti-Cheat, like any ArabRust server for example)

krellor ,

Right, I get using a cracked version for compatibility, and tried to convey that on my first post. I've done the same thing, especially with older games.

calzone_gigante ,

Some require kernel level access, which is a big security risk.

simple , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.

I second Nobara, but IMO get the KDE edition of it if you’re used to Windows. You’ll feel much more at home.

DarkThoughts ,

You could've at least read his post first?

simple ,

What about it? OP is asking for a distro recommendation.

DarkThoughts ,

if you’re used to Windows.

While OP writes, in his first sentence:

I’ve been using Ubuntu as my daily driver for a good few years now.

helenslunch , in Linux Gaming beyond Steam: Building native support for GOG, Epic, and more
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

What is “native” support, in this context?

We already have Lutris, HGL, etc. what else are they trying to add?

JoeKrogan , in Recommended linux variant for gaming.
@JoeKrogan@lemmy.world avatar

I use Debian with steam installed via flatpak

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