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  • Drivers

    Linux has no problem with them. Unlike only one manufacturer, that breaks all drivers without holy blessing since late Maxwell era.

  • While I agree, the article mostly explains how Linux is almost caught up to Windows for gaming. For me, Linux > Windows, so if Linux can play enough games to keep me occupied, it's a better "gaming" system. This was true for me before Steam even came to Linux.

    That said, this article completely ignores the fact that many of the most popular games rely on anti-cheat w/o Linux compatibility, so that right there kills Linux as a contender regardless of its many other merits.

    I guess my point here is to please don't oversell Linux. You want someone's first impression to be positive, and if they run into game compatibility issues at the start, the experience will be far from positive. I would much rather see a section right at the top about how to check game compatibility, since that's what most people would want to check before looking at the various other things that are awesome about Linux.

    Epic Games

    ...

    We also don’t have to worry about download speeds, as they’re even better compared to the Windows client.

    Is this true? If so, it's very surprising.

    By the way, I always encountered risk control and couldn’t enter the game when playing Rogue Company on Windows. I don’t understand why the anti-cheat component considers me a threat, but after switching to Linux, I no longer faced this issue; it has been much smoother than on Windows.

    Anecdotal. I doubt this is a Linux vs Windows thing, but more that they saw different OSes being used by the same account and flagged based on that.

    Some of these emulators also have versions for Windows or macOS, but on Linux, we can directly download and install them from the store, without the need to worry about dependencies or version issues, making it a lot easier compared to Windows and macOS.

    Good point. Package management is really nice on Linux. However, if you don't know what you're looking for, you're in a similar camp as on Windows.

    Games on the Android platform can also run on Linux. In addition to virtualization ways like Windows and macOS, Linux can run without virtualization by using namespaces. If you’re interested, you can check out my previous article on Android Application on Linux without Virtualization.

    Huh, neat!

    Besides Steam, we can also use cross-platform tools like Flathub: Parsec to control Windows hosts directly on Linux. This means that even games that can’t be run through the aforementioned ways can still be played on Linux, completing the last piece of the puzzle.

    So you'd need a second PC? That hardly seems convenient.

    Actually, I also wanna introduce some advantages of the Linux graphical interface over Windows in terms of gaming experience. For example, GNOME’s Do Not Disturb botton allows me to toggle all notification alerts with a single click.

    Yeah, this is certainly neat. I'm actually surprised Windows doesn't have something similar, but maybe each app handles notifications itself there?

    Additionally, I have never encountered the issue on Linux where I can’t temporarily return to the desktop during fullscreen gaming, which is something I often face on Windows, where the taskbar pops up but returning to the desktop is impossible. On Linux, regardless of which game I’m playing, whether in fullscreen mode or borderless window mode, I can freely switch between windows.

    On the flipside, I've had a lot of really odd problems switching applications on Linux. I don't know if it happens on Windows too since I haven't used Windows in a decade or so, but I'm guessing the Linux experience here is worse.

    I also sometimes have games completely lock up Linux, which I'm guessing is probably the Wayland compositor crashing. That used to happen to me on Windows, but again, this is from >10 years ago, so I'm not sure if it applies today.

    • Agree with your Anti-cheat point. I soooo want to move over to Linux but mainly Valorant is keeping me from switching (and I probably have other games like PUBG that might not work on Linux either?, while writing this checked and yep: https://www.protondb.com/app/578080)

  • Until people can click install and never have to use terminal like they can in windows for 99.9% of their games and drivers windows will stay the king of gaming...again with these bait posts...get back to reality...most teens can't even use command prompt you think they are gonna wanna game on Linux? Hell most teens wanna game on a cell phone as is. Your target market should be the young so they grow and live with your products but Linux target market is the guys who were 20 when hackers came out in 1995.

    • There are distros for that. Ubuntu and derivatives have a GUI hardware detection tool that finds the right driver for you. Some distros come with Nvidia drivers out of the box. Most have a GUI tool for adding extra package repos for things like Nvidia drivers.

      But it's important to note that this isn't a Linux problem, it's an Nvidia problem. AMD drivers are bundled with the kernel because they're FOSS, and Nvidia could totally do the same thing.

      I'm not saying Linux is perfect, I'm saying you don't need to use the terminal if you're just trying to play games.

      • I am on the record saying that having to copy/paste one line to terminal isn't the dealbreaker most people say it is.

        Weirdly, your attempt to argue against it shows the real problem.

        Normies won't distro-hop across five options to find the one that works, they maaaaybe will install one thing once by clicking "Next" through the installer. If it doesn't work after clicking all the Next buttons then it doesn't work. Normies won't add a repo, GUI or CLI. If the app is not in the "store" (or if you can't click a button on a website to install it), then it's not supported. Normies don't care if it's an Nvidia or a Linux problem. If their expensive GPU works on Windows but not on Linux, then Windows works and Linux doesn't.

        It's weird to me how warped this conversation is top to bottom. It really is that one XKCD comic turned into a lifestyle.

190 comments