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linux_gaming

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hschen , in issues installing nobara project
@hschen@sopuli.xyz avatar

Im not sure exactly but maybe its secure boot in your bios?, back in the day had to disable that for ubuntu

cold OP ,

already had it disabled; guess i’ll just look into another distro

yamapikariya , in Laptop fan/heat struggles
@yamapikariya@lemmyfi.com avatar

When was the last time you cleaned the vents? My laptop stopped blowing air out of the vents all together because it developed a solid layer of dust.

LunchEnjoyer OP ,
@LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

Guess I’ll open up the bad boy to check it properly, thanks for the tip 👌

jaykstah , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way

It’s been a beautiful thing to see. IIRC Proton was announced and usable sometime in 2018. Things were still rough then but it was a good sign.

When DOOM Eternal dropped it didn’t work for a while and I’d refresh the GitHub issue page daily until one day it was fixed and has worked perfectly ever since.

Apex Legends was one of the only things keeping me dualbooting Windows, then February last year it comes out that Apex added Proton compatibility for EAC thanks to the work Valve did behind the scenes collaborating with anti-cheat developers, so I nuked my Windows partition and haven’t looked back.

We’ve had some crazy momentum over the past few years and it seems things keep improving a step up every few months. Not to mention projects like GloriousEggroll’s proton that has consistently been offering patches to fix certain games earlier than they’re released with Valve’s upstram Proton Expiremental.

Id periodically gone full-time Linux on and off over the past 6 or 7 years and it was always gaming that pulled me back. Now it’s been a good 4 years aside from dualbooting for Apex and with that out of the way I haven’t really had a need to touch Windows at all since. This is truly the best time so far to be gaming on Linux :D

bigmclargehuge ,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, when I found out Titanfall+Northstar mod works flawlessly on Linux, it was a pretty good day (the Northstar devs even package the mod as a custom Proton runner just for us Linux users)

jaykstah ,

Oh yeah! Earlier this year i bought Titanfall 2 on sale and was so hyped to see how well Northstar worked with it. It’s one of my favorite multiplayer games now for just casually hopping in matches here and there. The movement mechanics are so damn satisfying

Xylight , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way

Proton is so great that I buy a few games, play them for hours, just to realize there wasn’t a native Linux version. I don’t even notice.

Eeyore_Syndrome , in issues installing nobara project
@Eeyore_Syndrome@sh.itjust.works avatar

Consider Universal-Blue:

May I also suggest installing Silverblue or Kinoite and rebase to:

Or try the ISO:

universal-blue.org/-would-i-use-these

It’s cloud based image of Fedora with NVIDIA drivers slipped right in there, easy peasy.

cold OP ,

will look into it, thanks for the suggestion

Phat_Albert , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way

Are nvidia drivers supported natively?

xtapa ,

No, but I had no major problem gaming with an Nvidia card on Tumbleweed. Just followed the wiki guide and added it to the zypper repos and everything was fine.

bigmclargehuge ,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Depends on the distro. On arch and arch derivatives they are in the official repos

priapus ,

Yes, you just need to install the drivers according to the instructions for your distro

Loommix , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way
@Loommix@lemmy.wtf avatar

I started with Gaming on Linux about 5 years ago and since then it is crazy to see it improving from month to month.

darkfoe , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way

Been straight Linux since 2005ish. It’s definitely really improved just before COVID - things just work now without fiddling. In the past yeah, I had to fiddle quite a bit to make things work and write up some scripts for installs that would break next patch, but now I’m almost done a Witcher 3 play-through on Linux without even needing to adjust a thing.

Ignacio , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way

I started using Linux in 2008, and full time in 2011. I remember I could play natively to a bunch of games, like Dungeon Crawl Stone Soup, Neverball, Torcs, Dark Oberon, and others. I enjoyed those games, and I still enjoy some of them today. I think it was in 2013 when Steam announced it was coming to Linux, and native ports came too, like Braid and Dynamite Jack. Now, despite my hardware limitations, I can enjoy GTA IV, Stellaris, Prison Architect, Dwarf Fortress, The Stanley Parable Ultra Deluxe...

Things changed for the better, and thanks to Steam Deck, it'll keep changing.

SMSPARTAN , in What headphones are you all using while gaming on Linux?

When I need a microphone I use my Cloud Alpha S, but most of the time I use my Letshuoer S12 with a CX-31993 and in the future I plan on getting an Audio Technica ATH-R70x.

If you want wireless, you could always get a good pair of headphones and pair them with either the FiiO BTR5 or the Qudelix5k.

GiuEliNo , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way
@GiuEliNo@feddit.it avatar

Yeah thanks to wine developers, valve funding, vulkan and all the projects in the middle, it really has come a long way. Anticheat and drm are just the last brick we missing for a complete support for almost every game.

Xylight ,

Some would say it’s a benefit that spyware anticheat doesn’t run on Linux.

20gramsWrench , in Proton compatibility

You seem to have run in a few issues right off the gate, usually, one would just install steam through the distro’s repositories, then let steam itself install whichever proton version they need need and run re game without any problems

You might get more success trying to fix the first installation process of steam failing than messing around with flat-packs and such.

c0mbatbag3l OP ,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

The steam installation process didn’t fail, when I attempted to launch a game it would get eternally hung up on the directx script. This persisted across multiple reinstalls of the traditional steam distro in the software. Plus I literally got the advice to try flatpak from a GitHub thread.

Installing it via flatpak was the only way I could get anything to launch.

20gramsWrench ,

I have no intention to push you towards another distro since you will get more out of fixing issues on the one you have than just hopping, but what made you get nobara instead of a more tried and trusted distribution like base fedora or arch derivatives ?

c0mbatbag3l OP ,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

Nobara is just fedora with wine and proton dependencies installed, or so I was lead to believe.

What’s wrong with it?

c0mbatbag3l OP ,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

Nobara is just fedora with wine and proton dependencies installed and some other software like discord prepackaged, or so I was lead to believe.

What’s wrong with it? I chose it over arch because fedora has a longer track record since it’s the professional Linux distro. I figured that was a good move.

c0mbatbag3l OP ,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

Nobara is just fedora with wine and proton dependencies installed and some other software like discord prepackaged, or so I was lead to believe.

What’s wrong with it? I chose it over arch because fedora has a longer track record since it’s the professional Linux distro. I figured that was a good move.

20gramsWrench ,

I don’t know enough about neither fedora nor Nobara to even have an opinion about It, but I do feel like it is a bit counterintuitive to install a niche distro which added fun stuff to a fairly pro oriented distribution when there are “major” distributions that have been all about fun stuff since long ago like mint/arch and such. But that’s just me extrapolating from the time I was using opensuse and was stuggling to find documentation and/or support on my pursuit of fun, which led me back to arch-based stuff, arch being a distro 100% created for people to dick around in rather than work

c0mbatbag3l OP ,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

Alright, so here’s how the story goes.

The last time I tried to get into Linux gaming I intended to use Arch, but had trouble finding an iso file to build a bootable from. I searched for help online and what did the first guy ask me?

“Why would you want to use Arch when Nobara is a “purpose built for gamers” fork of the track record holding fedora distro intended for professional use?”

Keeping in mind that I intend to use the laptop for desktop capture through OBS and possibly light editing through Davinci which I’ve already got working. Maybe that altered why that particular user suggested the gamified professional distro Nobara instead of Arch, idk.

At the end of the day everyone’s got an opinion and a justification for that opinion. I used Nobara because Rufus built the bootable with their iso first time up no fuss. If Arch had been as simple maybe I’d be on that instead.

20gramsWrench ,

Haha, can’t blame you one bit, asking for distro advice on a linux forum is like asking about tool brands at a cookout.

though now that you have a distro installed, you’ll be able to put linux iso on a usb drive using the “restore disk image” function in gnome-disk, way less finicky than rufus.

Mangoguana , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way
@Mangoguana@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah I am currently using my steam deck as a main desktop drive, I was blown away at how good this operating system is. I can’t go back. I just can’t. The only thing that pisses me off is that I can’t use adobe software, but hey my wallet is thanking me.

What really makes me happy, is no ads. No store, no xbox icon, no bloatware, no <activate windows>, no edge being like a jealous gf, no programs to install programs, no windows defender making me paranoid, no firewall, no forced graphics chosen for me by microsoft, no ten ways to do the same action…

Honestly I don’t know why I didn’t switch. I remember trying to get a computer without windows and my brother advising against it, I want to go back in time and slap him from depriving me from such a well conceived experience.

davetansley , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way
@davetansley@lemmy.world avatar

It’s crazy. I’ve tried 100s of games on my Steamdeck, and I can’t think of a single example where one straight up failed to run. The most I’ve had to do is change the Proton version after a bit of Googling. Best of all, it doesn’t feel compromised - it feels like you’re running natively.

(I should say, I don’t do much online gaming, so I haven’t been thwarted by anti-cheat)

I realised the other day how ubiquitous Linux has become in my life. I have a Steamdeck, I run Mint on my laptop. I have numerous Pis around the house doing various things. For emulation I have a MiSTerFPGA and a Miyoo Mini Plus. My arcade cab runs RetroPie. It all just kind of sneaked up on me…

Heels ,

I’ve only had issues with EA’s launcher, every time it updates and sometimes just because it feels like it, it doesn’t load the game. I squarely put that blame on EA though and not proton. Besides that it’s pure witchcraft.

jaykstah ,

Yeah the whole EA App thing is so frustrating. When it was still Origin I had issues here and there but nowadays if I don’t play Battlefield 4 for a while it just won’t launch until I reinstall the EA App smh

jerb , in Gaming on Linux has come a long way

It’s honestly gotten to a point where I don’t even check ProtonDB anymore unless it’s a brand new game. Generally things just work.

addie ,
@addie@feddit.uk avatar

Yeah - I’d narrow that down to brand new AAA game (likely to have Denuvo) or multiplayer, as some anticheats don’t work. Basically everything else now? Perfect.

I took the day off work to play Elden Ring when it first came out, and was gutted when it didn’t start on Linux. Glorious Eggroll had the fix up about three hours later, after which it’s been absolutely perfect.

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