There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

linux_gaming

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

muhyb , in Linux Desktop Share keeps increasing, 3.13% now. Narrowing the gap to ChromeOs 3.24%

So 1/5 of the world using Macs? That doesn’t sound right. Also that’s pretty impressive for one company.

Beni , in Solved: Mafia Definitive Edition just displays nothing

Maybe it’s an Wayland issue, try launching the game(s) in gamescope.

gamescope %command%

Or switch to X if you want.

theoware OP , (edited )

Thanks for suggesting that, but it unfortunately didn’t work and the problem hasn’t changed

theoware OP ,

I tried using gamescope again but with passing some flags, which I found on protondb

eval $(echo gamescope -W 2560 -H 1440 -r 165 -f – “%command%” | sed “s/2KLauncher/LauncherPatcher.exe’.*/mafiadefinitiveedition.exe’/”)

TheAnnoyingFruit , in Team Fortress 2 launch issues

Did you update your system other than your nvidia driver? Like from fedora 37 to 38

Shabamjenkins OP ,

I usually install updates as they pop up: drivers, apps, whatever. Between the 2 days of TF2 working and then TF2 not working, I’m pretty sure there wasn’t any real updates.

TheAnnoyingFruit ,

I’d recommend installing the flatpak. Tf2 stopped working for me when I upgraded to fedora 38. The flatpak seems to fix whatever dependency issue is causing it. It also fixes portal 2 and Gmod cause those also stopped launching on f38.

w_l_l_w , in Baldur’s Gate 3 countdown: Exact start time and date

Looks like it could be fun if I had friends to play it with xD Never managed to finish divinity original sin 2

skymtf , in It's Recommended To Avoid Using The Open-Source NVIDIA Driver On Linux 6.3

I cannot wait for Nvidia stuff to just be a part of MESA

charliegrahamm , in I want to dual boot W11 with Arch on my Raid 0 setup

If you do decide to go with a dual boot, I highly recommend rEFInd.

Just gives you a slightly prettier OS selection bootloader.

www.rodsbooks.com/refind/

Puzzle_Sluts_4Ever , in I want to dual boot W11 with Arch on my Raid 0 setup
  1. Do not use RAID… anything for an OS that is not designed for it*. Especially not RAID 0 (which barely deserves to be called “RAID”) where you are mostly just increasing the odds of a failure taking out all of your data. A good rule of thumb is to have a smaller drive/partition for the OS and then put the vast majority of storage on a separate drive/partition. That way, if the OS fails it is a fast recovery with minimal data loss.
  2. Things may have changed over the years (the last time I tried was four or five years ago?) but I strongly discourage from any form of dual booting. Windows has a tendency to find ways to completely destroy the bootloader with the most random of updates and then you are stuck having to fix grub and the like. I THINK you can get away with putting each on their own partition, but I am a big fan of one OS per drive and just mashing del as you boot up to pick which drive or doing shenanigans with telling the bios what to boot into on the next reboot while still in linux/windows.
  3. (time to piss some folk off!) Honestly? If you are asking these questions, I suggest not going with Arch. It is a really good distro, but it expects a lot more knowledge of linux from users. People around here hate debian/ubuntu with a passion, but do keep an eye out for some more newbie friendly distros to get your feet wet and learn what YOU care about and want from your distro. Bare minimum, consider Manjaro since that tries to put a more user friendly layer over Arch (and kind of succeeds?)

*: And, somewhat controversially, I would argue that any OS that is actually designed around running across multiple drives (beyond “I guess that could work? Maybe?”) is probably not the best choice because… there is pretty much zero reason to ever do this. Storage should definitely be distributed (and redundant). OSes are disposable and any good OS has a way to rapidly recover in the event of a failure or a corruption.

Moc OP ,

I’m a software engineer, and I know my way around Bash have some familiarity with Linux- mostly Debian. My understanding of how very low leveled stuff happens on my computer is very incomplete though, hence why I ask for help.

If you recommend something that’s not Arch, I’m happy to try it, though.

Puzzle_Sluts_4Ever , (edited )

Typing commands into a terminal and administrating a system are very different beasts. Arch gets a bit of a bad rep, but it very much still considers a desktop to be a “linux system” rather than “a computer”. Ubuntu and Mint tend to be pretty far on the other side of the spectrum as they do their best to make things seamless to the user and put the vast majority of (pertinent) config settings in GUIs and the like.

On its own? Looking up what to run and how to fix problems is not the end of the world. But a lot of the greybeards out there will insist on ONLY answering the specific question asked and nothing related. So you either need to end up cross referencing and researching twelve different aspects of an answer that MAYBE is correct, or you are bowing and asking for help so that said greybeard will paste the rest of the answer they held off on to feel good about themselves. ChatGPT goes a LONG way toward avoiding this, but you still have the “so… is this even correct?” problem that you only really learn from experience and “thinking like a linux distro”

I already suggested Manjaro if you really like Arch but want something more user oriented. But your best bet is to just go browse “linux getting started” on youtube and watch a few videos on the install and configuration process for various distros. You’ll obviously find people who insist you need to be doing manual systemd calls and doing sudo emacs for every config file in Ubuntu, but this should give you a good idea of what the “philosophy” of each distro is. Which then lets you figure out which one(s) you want to try.

Personally? All servers should be Debian or some form of RHEL. As a desktop, I used to use Mint but went back to Ubuntu a year or two back. I don’t want to be a sysadmin when all I want to do is play some games or watch some media and most of my work is on servers or involves manually building out dependencies anyway. But everyone is different and that is the beauty of linux. Hell, you can even be a complete psychopath and insist on using BSD instead (not sure how that works with Steam though).

And if you set up your partitions (or just drives) correctly, changing distros is a 20 minute process with zero data loss. I mean, I am increasingly looking at alternatives because the Ubuntu snap obsession is increasingly pissing me off. Not a huge deal, but also… changing distros is not a huge deal.

just_another_person , in Chiaki not recognizing PS5 dual sense input

If Steam can recognize the input from the controller, but the other program cannot, it means the OS is getting the input, and this Chiaki program either doesn’t have permissions to read the input, or it’s looking in the wrong place. I’m not seeing much documentation for it unfortunately, but you can try starting it from a terminal to try and get some debug output when it runs and see if it’s throwing any errors.

hohoho , in I want to dual boot W11 with Arch on my Raid 0 setup
@hohoho@lemmy.world avatar

I found this to be more or less impossible on my AM4 platform. The AMD RAID kernel module didn’t work under any distro. Fire up an Ubuntu live environment and see if you can detect and read the contents of your Windows environment. That should give you a good sense for what is possible. Otherwise I recommend installing to a separate NVME as I have.

donut4ever , in I want to dual boot W11 with Arch on my Raid 0 setup

I’m not sure if having a raid is related in this situation, but if you have two drives on the machine and one already has windows then all you needed to is boot into a distro live session and install it on the empty drive. That’s all. Also, I wouldn’t start with Arch Linux. Try something more user friendly to install if you’re new to Linux.

Auster , in Games take forever to load in heroic

If it's the same as Kbin Social, you can break line with either double enter, or double space at the end of a line.

hansdampf , in dualshock 4 on Arch

could also be an issue with the user not being part of the proper group (in this case ‘input’) check out this wiki entry regarding groups: wiki.archlinux.org/title/Users_and_groups

juipeltje , in Ubisoft Connect update broke linux compatibility
@juipeltje@lemmy.world avatar

The launcher hasn’t worked in over a year for me, it just refuses to log in. I think from what i ended up reading on reddit recently that it’s an mtu issue, but changing mtu also didn’t do anything. I might have to change something in a config file but i didn’t want to bother going through the trouble to get their stupid launcher working. I don’t really play their games anyway. Most of the games on my account are games that they gave away for free.

hummel OP ,

I just want to play “Trackmania” :)

juipeltje ,
@juipeltje@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, understandable. Sucks that their launcher is so wonky under linux.

imnotneo , in Please help with distro decision

I guess it depends on what you want.

I’d go with something with a lot of support like Ubuntu if you’re new to Linux.

Molecular0079 , in dualshock 4 on Arch

It works out of the box for me. You may need to enable Steam Input for Playstation controllers in the Steam settings in order to get it to work inside games.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines