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linux_gaming

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kugmo , in Current state of Intel Arc graphics cards on Linux?
@kugmo@sh.itjust.works avatar

You want to use the latest kernel and mesa versions (preferably git or release candidate versions). The new Xe kernel module allegedly doesn’t support hardware accelerated video decoding so you’ll need to stick with i915. If Intel’s new GPUs dont have the hardware acceleration issue it would be a no-brainer to buy once the performance issues are ironed out.

JaxiiRuff , in Suggestions for a wireless headset, anyone?
@JaxiiRuff@pawb.social avatar

Steelseries Arctis 1 for sure. Hits all the right spots and is reasonably priced.

The connection is made through a usb c dongle but I prefer it that way because it lets me be use bluetooth for controllers instead. Also has a detachable mic and a headset jack.

vikingtons ,
@vikingtons@lemmy.world avatar

I was pleasantly surprised to find that chatmix worked properly with my arctis 7s USB receiver.

wizardbeard , in Playing S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Anomaly 1.5.2 on Linux

You should also post this to the STALKER community. Make the content you want to see, otherwise it’ll never get better.

Narann , in Playing S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Anomaly 1.5.2 on Linux
@Narann@lemmy.world avatar

I was a fan of STALKER. What is Anomaly?

EuroNutellaMan OP ,
@EuroNutellaMan@lemmy.world avatar

Standalone mod which is basically a whole new stalker game

A_Random_Idiot ,

a much harder stalker game, thats set across all the regions from SoC/CS/CoP.

LunchEnjoyer , in OpenSuse Tumbleweed Gaming Advice (or in general)
@LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

Been using TW for a while now, also never had any issues with gaming. Following the instructions already given in other comments.

Acklavidian , in Bullet Heaven recommandation ? (vampire survivors like)

What about Risk of Rain 2 or Synthetic?

folak OP ,

I love ROR 2, I made all achivement, it’s one of my favourite game.

septick ,

Risk of Rain Returns was released a few days ago.

monstoor , in OpenSuse Tumbleweed Gaming Advice (or in general)

I have been using TW (and its predecessors) for around 17 years and have no major complaints at all! KDE Plasma is my preferred desktop and TW comes with that option as a default. Wayland is available but still has a few niggles with KDE Plasma in my experience.

TW will play both indie and mainstream games with no problem and comes with many repos of up-to-date packages. CoolerControl is a good app for setting up your Kraken if necessary. Your GPU should work out-of-the-box.

TW supports Secure Boot and should detect it when setting up. My advice for installation is to create a bootable USB stick with the network install version of TW and go from there. The GUI allows you to select a default installation or set things up just how you like them.

Let me know if you have any questions!

sugar_in_your_tea ,

I’ve been on TW for 3-4 years now (something like my 4th distro? Been on Linux for 15-ish years), and it’s great. I used KDE for the first 2-3 years until I replaced my NVIDIA card with an AMD card, and now I’m on GNOME because it has much better Wayland support.

I have no complaints about TW whatsoever. My main complaint is that openSUSE seems adamant about eliminating Leap, so I’ll have to figure out MicroOS sometime in the next year or so to migrate my servers. But that has nothing to do with TW or gaming, so it should be irrelevant for OP.

warmaster ,

How is Wayland better on GNOME? You mean stable, more features? I just moved to KDE to get VRR & HDR.

sugar_in_your_tea ,

More stable. As in, it works pretty much as I expect vs the X11 version, whereas KDE on Wayland crashes for me (or is just glitchy).

If it works, great, but it was pretty much unusable for me so I switched to GNOME for VRR and whatnot.

warmaster ,

GNOME now supports VRR? Damn, you’re tempting me to go back. I love GNOME’s UX/UI and it’s gazillion of libadwaita apps.

sugar_in_your_tea ,

It has for ages, even on X11 IIRC. I happen to have two monitors, one with VRR and the other without, and I needed Wayland to get that to work properly.

This is on AMD, YMMV with NVIDIA.

warmaster ,

Is vsync still being forced?

sugar_in_your_tea ,

Idk, I don’t play competitive games, and I don’t particularly value high FPS gaming (my monitor only goes to 95hz, which is plenty for the games I play).

I have seen that KDE supposedly allows turning it off now, so it’s possible GNOME also does since GNOME seems to generally have better Wayland support. But I’m really not sure, I just generally leave vsync on in games.

Makoto009 OP ,

Thank you very much! All you guys!

I tried the network installer but it keeps failing (i think because of maintenance --> status.opensuse.org/-36 ) First of all, i do like the first few hours on TW (installed it on my notebook because cant boot my main machine right now and so i can try to tinker a bit with it).

And yes i do have a few question :)

But first of all i need to know if there is an app which can create WebApps like the WebApp application from mint. I know that i can create such things with chrome but is there an extra app for that available for TW? I searched the web but didn’t find a good solution.

The other things i want to try out first before asking, but i’m realy shure, that there will be a few other things i need to ask :)

Tarquinn2049 , in Bullet Heaven recommandation ? (vampire survivors like)

Is bullet heaven the name for a bullet hell with character progression? Cuz that feels about right to me, lol. I loved bullet hell games as a kid, but I just can’t anymore on the ones that require me to build my own skillset to do well at them. I’d rather just put in the time now to make my character good at them. I find myself playing all the “used to be hard game type but now has rpg mechanics” nowadays.

Basically the “roguelite” to their original “roguelike”. Like yeah your own skill still helps, but all it does is saves time now, you will eventually get there no matter how bad you are at the game. I used to eventually beat those older games, but as time wore on it got to a point where there was just stuff I couldn’t do anymore, no matter how much practice or even state save scumming I put in. Even going back to older games I had already mastered.

So yeah, I definitely am glad it’s become pretty prevalent now that those games have evolved to be more accessible. I miss being able to play the hard versions, but at least I can still play something like them.

sirico , in OpenSuse Tumbleweed Gaming Advice (or in general)
@sirico@feddit.uk avatar

Install proton-up flatpak, install steam,lutris/heroic, whatever you want to use for the other stores. That has worked for me on any distro.

Try open-RGB for RGB control.

Your hardware isn’t bleeding edge, so older packages aren’t really that much of an issue unless you suffer from FOMO or just have to have that 1.1.2 feature, which case I found Flatpak delivers a fair amount of up-to-date apps.

The LCD display might need a Windows VM just to jump into when you want to manage that or look into opencorsairlink: github.com/audiohacked/OpenCorsairLink

Gkraken: gitlab.com/leinardi/gkraken/blob/…/README.md

simple , in Bullet Heaven recommandation ? (vampire survivors like)

Halls of Torment gets my vote. As usual with the genre it’s pretty grindy so I lost interest, but it’s probably the best vampire survivors-like I’ve tried yet. Works flawlessly on Proton btw.

CarbonatedPastaSauce ,

First of this type I played and I loved it. I came to this thread to scout more like it! I think I have 1 achievement left to 100% HoT. Great game.

dlove67 , in Help...First time installing a Radeon on Linux (7800 XT)

As others have said “Ya doin it wrong!”

AMD has the AMDGPU kernel driver already in place in the linux kernel, and excluding the newest generations of cards for about a month or two after they come out, that part should work fine. Additionally, you need Mesa installed for the userspace drivers. It is typically preinstalled and covers the OpenGL and Vulkan drivers for your card.

Pretty much the only time you want to run the driver from AMD’s site is if you’re using some particular professional applications, otherwise Mesa tends to outperform it. There are relatively few games that AMDVLK (the AMD official open source Vulkan driver) is ahead, and it’s got an edge in most (all?) raytracing cases currently.

Lastly, the reason it doesn’t work is because the driver install script is checking your os-release version to see if it matches the Ubuntu version it was packaged for. If you’re confident that you can fix any problems that arise from doing this, you could presumably just change the string in /etc/os-release to match what it’s looking for. I don’t recommend doing this, though, unless you don’t care if the drivers break things because they weren’t packaged for the release you’re using.

tal ,
@tal@lemmy.today avatar

AMD has the AMDGPU kernel driver already in place in the linux kernel, and excluding the newest generations of cards for about a month or two after they come out, that part should work fine.

Reading his comment, it looks like KDE Neon ships with a two-year-old kernel, so I assume that that’s the issue.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KDE_neon

20230706, based on Ubuntu 22.04 and Plasma 5.26.5, kernel Linux 5.15 / 6 July 2023

Linux 5.15 came out in October 2021, and his card was just released.

dlove67 ,

So…what can I do? Neon is mostly Ubuntu 22.04 to most effects. Kernel is 6.2.0-36-generic.

The kernel in use should support RDNA3, I believe.

Edit: judging from the comment made a bit ago, it wasn’t the kernel or mesa, they were just missing the firmware. And yeah, that’ll do it. I remember being frustrated with my 7900xtx not working on Pop! before I pulled in the firmware back on release.

iturnedintoanewt OP ,
@iturnedintoanewt@lemm.ee avatar

Thanks. I wasn’t aware of the difference privative vs public ones on AMD. On Nvidia (where I came from) it’s kinda the opposite, noveau kinda works, but if you really want to play with proper performance, you should head for the privative one. In the end it was just easier to download the AMD firmware from the latest linux release, and recompile with that. It worked after that.

dlove67 ,

If you were missing firmware, that’s not actually a driver issue. You do need the firmware and (unless you also installed the professional drivers as well) you should be all good now and using the full open source stack.

Anyway, glad to hear it’s working for you!

iturnedintoanewt OP ,
@iturnedintoanewt@lemm.ee avatar

Yeah…kinda. Now on multi-monitor setup I have a weird glitch…when one of the monitors are turned off. Screen will start flickering rearranging the windows. Weird.

dlove67 ,

Do you mean it constantly does it when a monitor is turned off or that when you initially turn off a monitor, it rearranges all windows to fit on the remaining monitor.

If the first, I’m not sure what the problem might be, but the second is pretty normal, I think. The card sees that the display was detached and moves your windows to the attached display so you can see them.

iturnedintoanewt OP ,
@iturnedintoanewt@lemm.ee avatar

…the first, I’m afraid. It continues to jump the windows out of place, about 3 times within 2 seconds, every 20 seconds or so…

kttnpunk , in Anyone have Garuda experience?
@kttnpunk@lemmy.world avatar

Garuda is easily my favorite arch based distro, nice to see ppl talking about it! Once you get used to using yay instead of apt-get and the AUR in general it’s such a better experience

detalferous ,

How does yay work? Is the workout similar to apt? Update, upgrade, and install commands?

kttnpunk ,
@kttnpunk@lemmy.world avatar

To search the AUR and add a program:

yay (desired package) You’ll see multiple choices most likely, pick one and it’s pretty self-explanatory from there.

To remove program: yay -R (program)

system update/update all packages: yay -Syu

There are a few different package management tools too like Octopi which let you directly browse the AUR by category in a GUI but I think that’s pm the basics.

detalferous ,

Cool! Thanks for the reply!

ProtonBadger ,

With regards to Arch based distros: Do you still need to read Arch news to spot potentially breaking updates and know how to diff pacsave/pacnew, etc. or have Garuda found a way to manage these things?

kttnpunk ,
@kttnpunk@lemmy.world avatar

It’s probably wise to check the forums regularly, I had to reinstall the entire OS once (arguably because of NVIDIA) but on more than one occasion it’s stopped a update for me because packages were in conflict. So it’s nice that there’s some foresight on their part.

pelotron OP ,
@pelotron@midwest.social avatar

What do the -Syu arguments mean? I associate them with the Arch meme of “go ahead and break my system without prompting me first.”

Penta ,

S is for sync, which installs packages from the repositories. u is for upgrade, which upgrades out-of-date packages. y causes pacman to refresh the package databases. In short, it upgrades all packages that are out of date. It’s a very standard command and not dangerous lol. Btw, with yay just typing in “yay” without -Syu does the same thing, which is convenient

pelotron OP ,
@pelotron@midwest.social avatar

Thank you!

bigmclargehuge ,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar
bastion , in RTS recommendation

I’m gonna recommend Northgard. It’s a tile-based RTS with modern sprite graphics, as opposed to some games like Starcraft 2 or 0 AD (a free/libre game) that use 3d graphics. So, in some senses, it looks more indy or dated than a lot of modern offerings.

But it has really good gameplay, good base clans, good DLC, and is consistently updated. This can mean balancing/clan changes, but I must say that even when there was significant balancing action on my favorite clans, I come to accept and like the changes. Major DLC releases also come with content updates for the main game, and it really feels like Northgard is a labor of love.

It has a story mode that starts out easy-peasy and slowly ramps things up as you get better. It has multiplayer vs friends, random onliners, and/or bots of various difficulties. It has challenge modes per-clan that unlock new cosmetics.

Gameplay:

There’s a lot of complexity here, but the campaign does a really good job of introducing it at a rate that’s palatable.

This is a brief overview, mainly to show that, though Northgard may have simple graphics, it’s really an in-depth and balanced RTS.

  • Map tiles: you start with one, and acquire more.
  • Seasons: Winter is a bitch. Always be extra-prepared for a bad winter.
  • Random events: stuff to join in on or avoid. Rats, undead or ghost attacks, kraken, ceremonial bonfire, mine for the dwarves, exploding volcanoes that drop rock baddies that you can mine for stone
  • Neutral factions: earn their favor to avoid their ire or to become their allies. Giants, kobolds, a wyvern, dwarves, myrkalfar - all have different potential benefits if you earn them.
  • knowledges: learn and improve skills, gain clan specials, reduce costs - this is basically the tech tree.
  • win conditions: domination, fame, economic, and even clan-specific or map-specific win conditions

Resources:

  • happiness - earned through various means - nonphysical, not storeable - when positive, people work hard and new colonists come to the colony. When negative, people slack off and no new colonists arrive. Each colonist takes up happiness, except units that generate happiness, like bartenders.
  • lore - earned by loremasters and various means - nonphysical, storeable - buy knowledges
  • food - earned by food-producing units like farmers, fishers, hunters, healers, and idle colonists - storeable, infinite supply - all colonists need food to survive. Also used for colonizing new tiles and holding feasts (boost production and provide fame)
  • wood - earned by woodcutters - storeable, infinite supply - build and repair structures. Keep people warm in winter.
  • krowns - earned by sailors, trading posts, markets - storeable, infinite supply - money. Used in all kinds of areas. Used in training military units.
  • stone - earned by miners - storeable, limited supply - building upgrades
  • iron - earned by miners - storeable, limited supply - unit upgrades, hero spawn
  • military experience: level up your military along an attack, defense, or strategic path
  • fame: level up clan skills
  • economic influence: it’s complicated

Regardless of all of that complexity, Northgard manages to sum it all up into engaging, understandable gameplay, with clear stats on who’s made the most progress on win conditions, etc, and a straightforward and manageable learning curve.

You can undergo cascades when things don’t go right - a winter freezing without wood leaves everyone in poor health, often unhappy, performing at a fraction of their usual production - thus nobody’s needs are met and everybody stays unhappy and underperforming. A ‘simple’ fix is to make everyone into regular villagers again, then farmers, woodcutters, healers, and other roles as you can afford them.

Also - Linux native.

lal309 OP ,

Awesome write up! Sounds like an interesting contender!

FaceButt9000 , in RTS recommendation

I was and still am a big fan of the original Warhammer 40k: dawn of war.

Narann ,
@Narann@lemmy.world avatar

This and CC Generals are the best non-Blizzard RTS to date, IMHO.

Generals is hard to run on Linux, but DoW runs flawlessly.

lal309 OP , (edited )

I’m almost positive I have 40k somewhere but last time I looked at some gameplay, it seemed very overwhelming

Edit: my apologies, it looks like I got Total War: Warhammer confused with Warhammer 40k. Total War: Warhammer 3 is the one I have and it seemed huge in scale and very overwhelming

Cossty , in Nouveau NVIDIA GSP Firmware Support Merged For Linux 6.7

Great to see, sadly I wouldn’t be able to use it. I have GTX 10 series and the next one I will be buying is AMD or maybe Intel, if their drivers get a lot better by the time I am in a market for a new GPU.

russjr08 ,
@russjr08@outpost.zeuslink.net avatar

Yep, I have a RTX 2080 and am picking up a 6700 XT once my pay check lands later today (put in a bit of extra time to justify the cost) - I’ve given Nvidia more than enough time to get their act together.

I have heard that Intel had just recently released a pretty decent update to their driver, I haven’t been following it too closely but there’s certainly hope.

Cossty ,

Can I ask why 6700? In raster performance it’s only about 10 faster than 2080 and in ray tracing it is worse. It might be a bit different on linux, but either way, when I will be upgrading I want better improvement than that.

I don’t really need to play the latest games, so I can easily wait. My next gpu will probably be 8800xt or even 9800xt

russjr08 ,
@russjr08@outpost.zeuslink.net avatar

Primarily because my income doesn’t really allow for me to go any higher than that, I already worked a bit overtime last month since the opportunity was available in order to be able to pick it up. Short of a GPU magically falling from the sky, it was always going to be a lateral move at best. I’d love to either not have to spend money on a card that isn’t really going to gain me a performance boost (and I don’t do any raytracing, my gaming is still fairly lightweight - I’m still on 1080p 60Hz monitors for example), but Nvidia’s stupid games (ha) is pretty much forcing my hand.

As of right now, using Wayland is nigh impossible for me due to the this issue and a fix is a long way out from now because it requires approval on an explicit sync protocol, and then every single compositor will need to implement it - assuming it was approved fairly quickly, its not likely to land in KDE Plasma 6’s initial release, and I doubt it’ll make it in time for GNOME’s next release in the spring. If I used only Wayland-native apps it’d be fine, but that’s not the case - my IDE that I use for work for example uses XWayland and experiences the linked issue very heavily and makes it impossible to actually do any work in. Not to mention, most games still use XWayland since they run through WINE/Proton which doesn’t have Wayland support yet. But hey, at least Night Light/Color finally works in Wayland as of 545 (which don’t even get me started on how ridiculously long that took to get in)…

X11 is hugely problematic because I can hardly reach 60 FPS on just the desktop with basic windows open, the closest I can get is by running KDE and replacing the compositor responsibilities with picom, which has its own fair share of issues. I’ve spent all year trying various tweaks, driver versions, playing around with X/Nvidia settings, using KWin’s and GNOME’s triple buffer (patch), and this was the best I can do.

I was really banking on 545 fixing the situation with Wayland, but that’s not going to happen anytime soon given explicit sync needing to be added into XWayland - or Nvidia rewriting their driver to use implicit sync (which is a pipe dream, given that their driver’s unified architecture means that on Windows it would need to do implicit sync as well). NVK is still a fair bit out from being anywhere near production ready AFAIK, and nouveau is probably still a bit out there as well.

Ironically, Nvidia’s driver in Windows is also upsetting me. I get a stranger flicker from what I believe is the same issue as what was just fixed in 545 which is the power-state of the GPU changing. So this happens even when Steam draws its “Your friend is playing some game” notification, or opening a YouTube video.

Funnily enough, I didn’t even buy the 2080, it was passed down to me from a friend along with a few other components - I was previously on a GTX 970 which was… painful as I’m sure you can imagine due to its age, and wasn’t helped by Nvidia’s drivers being horrendous.

I’m not even a hardware person by any means (for various reasons, such as physical ailments), it was an accomplishment for me to be able to effectively tear down my old build, and replace all of the internals (PSU, Motherboard+CPU+RAM, GPU, liquid cooler… the whole works, only the case stayed the same really) so I’ll just be happy if I can get my new card swapped in without any issues. If one thing goes right for me this month, I just want it to be that.

At the end of the day, I just want my PC to work (and to let me literally work), and everything else is perfect and fully capable - well, I’m a bit disappointed by my new Intel WLAN card being shoddy in Linux but that’s a whole other story. Probably a lot longer of an answer than you expected, but that about sums it up haha.

Cossty ,

I guess that’s fair if you need AMD GPU right now for work.

I am fed up with Nvidia drivers too. Games run smoother on my Steam Deck than on my PC. Like I have higher average FPS on my PC but the frame time graph are spikes after spikes. And on Steam Deck frame time graph is smooth line.

russjr08 ,
@russjr08@outpost.zeuslink.net avatar

Definitely know where you’re coming from.with the frametime issues, I see the same thing whether in X or Wayland.

I thought that was just the state of Linux gaming for a while, since I hadn’t known anyone else personally who was using Linux (let alone playing games on top of that). It wasn’t until the Steam Deck came out which tons of my friends have that I realized “this is just another Nvidia thing is it”…

Cossty ,

Exactly the same thing, I just thought that was Linux gaming “it is what it is”, until I got steam deck.

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