this post was submitted on 26 Oct 2024
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Its time to switch to Linux!

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[–] Katana314 17 points 2 weeks ago (11 children)

In the last month, I made a genuine effort to switch to Linux Mint, then Bazzite, as my daily driver. Mint could not run Hitman 3 for unexplained reasons. Bazzite frequently got graphical corruption issues when returning from sleep. Neither could run niche indie games and gave no error codes.

I knew I’d be doing some tweaking to get Linux working how I wanted, but it was missing configuration as well as being unreliable by default. I like the principle of using a non-MS OS, but I need it to work.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (6 children)

Really bummed your experience has been like that! :(

In my humble experience, I've gotten almost everything new and old to run via Steam, or my GoG games to run via Heroic. Vermintide 2, Metro: Exodus, Enter the Gungeon, X-COM 2, BattleTech, MechWarrior 5, I even got old stuff like Sims 2 working flawlessly via Bottles.

Trying to install stuff like you would on Windows by running installers manually seems to not be so great though...could that have been it perhaps?

Using front-ends that manage Proton / WINE for you makes the process so much easier.

I ditched Windows entirely because Vermintide kept BSODing my Win10 install, and it wouldn't even let me "refresh" the OS. Fully doing work and play on OpenSUSE Tumbleweed these days and the only thing I'm REALLY missing is VR.

[–] Katana314 1 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

I knew I had whole folders of indie games that are just a folder with an executable, so I trialed those with Lutris. It needed a huge setup form just to run one of them, and when I finished, it wouldn’t run and gave no errors.

Having that as my experience for, as I said, a whole folder of games, wasn’t really in my interest. It takes too long for the community to say “Hey, I got Assassin’s Creed running! Just use Proton 8.13 beta, and add these 8 command line options”

[–] NutWrench 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

If you're using Steam, they use a native Linux client and a custom Proton that has all the settings and presets for their game library.

Everything I bought on Steam works for me under Linux Mint. And almost all my older games, like "Deus Ex" or "Giants: Citizen Kabuto" I can run directly under Wine with the default settings.

[–] Katana314 1 points 2 weeks ago

I get that, and I like it. When it works. (Hitman 3, which I know works under certain distros/Linux hardware, did not load levels for me on Linux Mint 22) Even on Bazzite, Helldivers 2 needed command line args to avoid a white border around the game in fullscreen.

Plus, much as I like Steam, I like competition, and I buy games off of other stores pretty often. Some of those stores just give you a zip file to download in your web browser.

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