I did it. For a few years now I’ve wanted to make the jump but lazyness and a bit of worry that my main game wouldn’t work very well kept me from it.

Then some effing windows update caused ridiculous stuttering on games (or maybe it was a auto-update of some other hidden thing, I couldn’t figure it out) so I decided that if I needed a system wipe, might as well as try gaming on linux.

Honestly? Much easier than I expected. Install Steam, turn two options on and 90% of your library is ready to go. I had to tinker with getting freesync to work (ended up just switching to wayland, which just worked) but other than the plugins I use for my main game requiring a bit of more work, smooth as butter really.

So yeah, if you are a lazy gamer like I am, next time you do a system wipe or get a new computer, try installing linux first. Don’t even bother Dual booting it, if you don’t like it just reinstall (setup your usb drive with ventoy and the images you want to try out.)

  • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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    3 months ago

    GET AMD INSTEAD OF NVIDIA. While everyone talks about how Nvidia is better than it used to be and stuff, AMD basically has zero problems on Linux.

    • apt_install_coffee@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      I have a 7800XT on Linux and I want to point out that I still run into their “drm_fec_ready” and “no edid read” bugs every day.

      amdgpu is miles ahead of what NVIDIA is offering, but it is still a GPU driver on a second class platform. Do not expect a flawless experience on bleeding edge hardware.

    • mb_@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      That has not been my experience… amdgpindriver was crashing quite often, gfx ring 0 timeout. Tons of people with that problem forums. I managed to adjust some parameters and fix it eventually.

      VRR doesn’t work properly, I can get it to work, burnout is a shore every time.

      I have both and nvidia and an amd GPU, and with xwayland fixed, the nvidia one can run just as well.

      That said, paying 2k for a GPU to have raytracing and 24gb of RAM isn’t that attractive.

    • RelativeArea0@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      As much as I want to agree to this, a part of me screams “STOP FANBOYING CORPORATIONS”

      Lemme tell you a short story about bait and switch

      We all know that android is a collaboration of companies to have an open handset ecosystem (which is weird, because these are companies driven for profit)

      one of these companies is quallcomm, they were so nice that they released an open source “bridge” for devs to thier hardware called codeauroraforums

      Thier marketshare grew and the performance of thier hardware were miles ahead the competition

      Then it came when these “subpar” and cheaper semicons caught up on thier performance and also…covid happened

      it shrank quallcomms earnings, made them to make some “decisions” and one of them is killing codeauroraforums, switched thier “opensource” stuff to codelinaro in which, all of the hardware supported are devkits of thier struggling snapdragon x

      In addition to these decisions to increase earnings, they also made a deal with microsoft to make laptop chipsets (just like what apple did. Unfortunately, barebone windows on arm is different from windows on snapdragon unlike apple with thier walled garden wherein they’ve designed thier chips inhouse)

      now they’re finger pointing who’ll support that thing, lmao

      So…uhm…yea, stop fanboying corporations and thank you for listening to my ted talk

      btw AMD is cool with linux…for now

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        3 months ago

        If you think recommending someone a GPU brand with drivers that are easier to install when they said they wanted something that just works is “fanboying” then I don’t know how to respond.

      • Mesophar@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        I agree with not overly fanboying, but “they might stop support” can literally happen with any platform. If AMD stops open source support, they’re in the same boat as NVIDIA but with a leg up from having all the history an experience from the time with support.

        Your favorite distro could go out of support and have the project closed tomorrow, just like Windows 10 reaching EoL. Except someone else can fork that distro and pick up the mantle to continue the project.

        That game that you really want to play on Linux might suddenly choose to implement an anti-cheat or DRM that isn’t compatible with Linux, or a different game might choose to remove that block and it suddenly opens up for the Linux community.