Thrashy, (edited )
@Thrashy@lemmy.world avatar

I installed KDE Neon on Friday evening and things were going great, everything was testing well, and Saturday game night with the gang went flawlessly, but this morning the VMWare Horizon Linux client spontaneously decided that it didn’t want to accept mouse input anymore, so after ten minutes of troubleshooting I gave up and booted back into Windows so that I can be productive today.

A battle lost, but the war is not over yet.

DragonTypeWyvern,

I get it, mice frequently just talk about nonsense.

VindictiveJudge,
@VindictiveJudge@lemmy.world avatar

I got one that kept trying to get me to tell it the ultimate question or something, whatever that is.

Tetristan,

I think i know the answer…

remotedev,

Fievel: am I a joke to you?

lugal,

Is the joke that games are proprietary software too?

force, (edited )

That and the software the hardware uses itself is proprietary

possiblylinux127,

It doesn’t have to be

abraxas,

Well that too. The real joke is that despite the fact we’ve had 10 “years of the linux desktop”, it’s still an absolute bitch to get PICK A GAME working on that shiny linux box.

My new Lenovo Legion, I’m struggling with desktop graphics tearing issues in linux (just viewing the WM, of all things). When i have time, I’ll muddle through it, but I can’t pretend that is easier in linux than windows. It’s vendor-driven, sure, but the end user doesn’t care why they waste 8 hours doing setup work, only THAT they do.

13617,

THIS oh my god

And the amount of people that will do ANYTHING to defend Linux baffles me, and they all do it thinking they help Linux in general instead of highlighting their issues so they can be fixed

Grain9325, (edited )

“Trust me guys, it’s 95% better with Proton now” lol

Some of those people need to see all the users asking for help on Linux gaming forums.

Not trying to dismiss that Linux Gaming has gotten better before Proton but it can be an absolute pain at times.

abraxas,

Yeah, trust me, Linux Gaming used to be real shit. “When it works it works” is lightyears better than it used to be.

I remember in my linux-only years, trying to muddle through linux exclusives. Oftentimes you had to be super careful because linux doesn’t love prepared binaries

abraxas,

I mean, I freaking LOVE linux. And for what it’s good for, it’s the best of the best. I’ve never had a better dev experience than in Ubuntu, mostly because WSL is a pale shadow of a good unix backend (and because Macs, while good, are still subpar for that purpose). But that means I’m already committing 40 hours a week to maintaining and using my machine!

But for gaming? For casual use? I dunno. The hardware has to be hand-picked carefully, as do the games.

pinkdrunkenelephants,

Why would anyone using FOSS stuff like Linux even want shitty corporate games anyway?

maniacal_gaff,

This was me last week when my wife wanted to play a PC game together and I threw the PC to the TV via HDMI for the first time since I switched from Windows to Arch. The audio would not work at all despite all the settings being very clear that it should be sending the audio over the HDMI. Same physical/hardware/cable/TV as the setup that worked flawlessly in Windows. Still not thrilled about that one.

LordKitsuna,

Make sure it’s sending to the correct port, if you go into the audio device management of whatever your desktop environment of choice was you should notice that you have the advanced options on the HDMI to select which HDMI port it’s going to

cupcakezealot,
@cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

install grub

install windows

only boot into windows

???

yamapikariya,
@yamapikariya@lemmyfi.com avatar

I always hear people say they sometimes have issues with games but I’ve switched to Linux relatively recently and I still haven’t had a game in my library that didn’t play.

BoastfulDaedra,

Ever since Valve started kicking it for Wine/Proton, gaming has been a cinch.

v4ld1z,
@v4ld1z@lemmy.zip avatar

Literally me when I was trying to get League working on Kubuntu on an 8-year old laptop lol

Unyieldingly,

Found the Nvidia user.

kittenzrulz123,

laughs in AMD

BoastfulDaedra,

Must be a by-distro thing. On KUbuntu and Pop! I’ve never had any issues with Nvidia, though I know that they’re a pain in the ass to work with.

CleanDefinition,

Same with Mint and LMDE, it just works.

BoastfulDaedra,

Mint is remarkably stable. They even seem to put a barrier up against Canonical’s questionable decisions.

That distro needs more funding and more shout-outs.

Macropolis,

It’s such a pain in the ass. Every time I have a kernal update it’s time to go into single user mode and hit up lynx for the new graphics driver.

Unyieldingly,

My issues have been proton with Nvidia, versions that work fine with AMD don’t work with Nvidia i can’t wait for NVK to be a thing.

For people who don’t know what NVK is.

www.collabora.com/…/introducing-nvk.html

bitwolf,

Will you’re almost free from that. I saw 6.7 uses the GSP firmware, so if you have a newer Turing card noveou (can never spell it) will be able to run games.

onlinepersona,

Fuck NVIDIA

tubaruco,

do you mean their graphics cards or everything they make?

onlinepersona,

No idea what else they make, but my experience with theirs graphics cards is enough to dissuade a purchase of any of their other products.

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

MonkeMischief,

What distro? Running OpenSUSE Tumbleweed here and used to have to do that too. It was awful.

They have an official Nvidia repo that works pretty great now though, and works between kernel updates.

…now if only updates would stop randomly deciding my computer can’t wake up from sleep anymore, that’d be lovely…

JackbyDev,

Why can/is openSUSE do/doing it but not others?

hakunawazo,

On the other hand I have a laptop with Intel and dedicated Nvidia card. Longterm ongoing heat problems (one heat pipe, one cooler, bad placement, thanks Dell) killed the Nvidia card.
Windows couldn’t run anymore and couldn’t be installed again.
With linux the laptop works again, at least with the Intel 3rd generation card.

Senshi,

Still a couple deal breakers for me, though most stuff otherwise runs fine. No HDR support. Sucks if you have a great monitor but can’t use it. No nvidia broadcast. Necessary for my mic+speaker setup, common alternative such as noisetorch are convenient, but don’t even come close to echo filtering quality from the speakers. Yes, that’s super subjective obviously. Performance tends to be noticeably to only slightly worse on max settings with nvidia on highly specialized, very demanding games. Some anti cheat tools struggle with compatibility modes.

We’re getting there, but it’s tough with nvidia not caring. :/

onlinepersona,

We’re getting there, but it’s tough with nvidia not caring. :/

That’s the biggest issue and unfortunately there’s not much that can be done about that except maybe Linux users swearing off of NVIDIA.

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Senshi,

My intent was just to provide a viewpoint from someone that loves and uses Linux aplenty, but spends a lot of time with Max quality gaming, using high end hardware.

And while things have improved massively over the past years and probably will get even better in the next years, nvidia’s monopoly on top performance GPU means I’m being bottle necked by their shitty Linux support.

Sure, I can play almost any game out there on Linux, but not with the performance and sometimes not even the same quality I can achieve with Windows. I know this is no fault of Linux, but it’s the pragmatic reality I’m confronted with.

BoastfulDaedra,

I understand the HDR thing dealt with the standards for it being absolute undecided mess; but it’s looking like we’ll have support cranked out before the end of 2024. Here’s hoping, I do all my multimedia stuff on KDE.

Aux,

The problem is that we will have crap loads more cool tech by that time. And none will work on Linux. It’s always years behind.

BoastfulDaedra,

On this I must respectfully disagree.

HDR monitors have been standardized more poorly than Bluetooth was, so I could kind of see this sort of producer interference coming. It didn’t help that the average user doesn’t even understand what that means.

Most modern hardware works out of the box on Linux, and often runs a stripped down kernel as its own firmware.

Aux,

Most modern hardware works out of the box on Linux

Except that it doesn’t.

Resol,
@Resol@lemmy.world avatar

Steam Deck time

doingless,

I’m too blind for a tiny screen.

Resol,
@Resol@lemmy.world avatar

Nintendo 3DS XL time then

user224, (edited )
@user224@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Reading this on smartphone in browser with desktop mode permanently enabled (and increased dp beyond smallest display size limit in dev settings).

I just wish it was 16:9. These ultrawide aspect ratios are terrible for a phone. Hell, I just want something like those old phablets.
My first “smartphone” was a 7" tablet with SIM card. Perhaps I should just try something like that, but tablets tend to be underpowered.

daniyeg,

this is exactly me every time i’m showing someone how easy it is nowadays to run games in linux, only for the game that was running perfectly the previous night to throw some random error and crash my system

Thcdenton, (edited )
  • Free of proprietary software
  • plays Apex Legends
fr4nk_j4eger,

I mean, Lutris, Protonup-qt and Winetricks get the job done pretty easily and fast once you learn how to use them.

Yerbouti,

Nobara + NVIDIA here. Everything works. Always. Seriously.

Aux,

Does multi monitor setup with different DPI work? Do DRM videos play? HDR?

mortrek,

They probably meant “everything that they use it for”. Like, in my case everything on Linux works for me, but I don’t play multiplayer games or use Photoshop. I have a single old monitor that can’t do HDR. I don’t watch Netflix. To be fair and pedantic, not everything anyone could possibly ever want to do works on Windows 11, either.

Yerbouti,

Of course I haven’t tested everything. But I’ve tested over 25 games and havent add issues. I do some serious audio editing (Reaper + tons of VST), video editing (Davinci Studio) and even tried some game engine stuff on linux (Unreal , Godot). Pretty much everything worked out of the box on Nobara. It’s optmize for games and AV. Honestly, even a year ago, I had no idea Linux was so good. I use (and teach) macOS for work, and was using Windows for gaming, but now I can do 90% of my things on Linux.

Yerbouti,

Yes, Yes (I think?, like what videos?), and Yes apparently.

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