Question: Would I still struggle to get games working on a desktop using Linux as I have in the past (always some driver issue for some crucial bit of hardware; either the GPU can’t do 3D or the NIC doesn’t function, etc) or would they work as well as on a Steam Deck, that doesn’t have to account for a variety of hardware differences? Almost every single person I have seen lately saying gaming on Linux is awesome now, is using a literal device designed for it. But what about my hardware? Is getting wrappers for nVidia drivers still a fucking PITA with a 50/50 chance of actually working correctly?
I love Linux for just basic computing needs or running servers. But I’ve always had a bad time when trying to play games.
Depends on the exact Nvidia card you’re using. The newer parts all have good drivers, but as you get older things get more fiddly.
But most of the improvement is in Steam’s compatibility mode. Proton allows you to run so many games with one click that use to be a whole project to configure.
PopOS has been running great for me with my RTX 2070 SUPER. I installed it maybe 3-ish years ago and haven’t had an issue upgrading driver versions.
Would recommend if you’re not opposed to trying different distributions.
I’m using Pop!_OS, and it’s pretty much made with gamers in mind. Steam works well enough for me in it. It has Lutris already installed, and I’m playing ESO through it. These are just my experiences, though.
I’m using a fairly modern 4060 rtx, every game I’m trying to play are either playable, or unplayable because of anticheats. If youre primarily using steam, more often than not you can just enable proton (compatibility) and run it. Just search protondb before purchasing and go to lutris if you want to know recipes to run offline games.
Using a 4090 on Kubuntu works well for my gaming so far. Wayland can be a bit buggy with NVIDIA, but nothing severe.
Admittedly, I don’t play anti-cheat games which don’t really work well and I tend to play older games more than not (though I did just get Stray, which looks great).
Question: Would I still struggle to get games working on a desktop using Linux as I have in the past (always some driver issue for some crucial bit of hardware; either the GPU can’t do 3D or the NIC doesn’t function, etc) or would they work as well as on a Steam Deck, that doesn’t have to account for a variety of hardware differences? Almost every single person I have seen lately saying gaming on Linux is awesome now, is using a literal device designed for it. But what about my hardware? Is getting wrappers for nVidia drivers still a fucking PITA with a 50/50 chance of actually working correctly?
I love Linux for just basic computing needs or running servers. But I’ve always had a bad time when trying to play games.
Depends on the exact Nvidia card you’re using. The newer parts all have good drivers, but as you get older things get more fiddly.
But most of the improvement is in Steam’s compatibility mode. Proton allows you to run so many games with one click that use to be a whole project to configure.
PopOS has been running great for me with my RTX 2070 SUPER. I installed it maybe 3-ish years ago and haven’t had an issue upgrading driver versions. Would recommend if you’re not opposed to trying different distributions.
I’m using Pop!_OS, and it’s pretty much made with gamers in mind. Steam works well enough for me in it. It has Lutris already installed, and I’m playing ESO through it. These are just my experiences, though.
I’m using a fairly modern 4060 rtx, every game I’m trying to play are either playable, or unplayable because of anticheats. If youre primarily using steam, more often than not you can just enable proton (compatibility) and run it. Just search protondb before purchasing and go to lutris if you want to know recipes to run offline games.
Yeah, Linux gaming may not be for you if you play a ton of anti-cheat games.
Using a 4090 on Kubuntu works well for my gaming so far. Wayland can be a bit buggy with NVIDIA, but nothing severe.
Admittedly, I don’t play anti-cheat games which don’t really work well and I tend to play older games more than not (though I did just get Stray, which looks great).
Plug and play, that easy.
Nobara would fit your needs perfectly.