I know gaming has gotten a lot better on Linux and I’m working on a new PC and I’m wondering which distro to try.

  • funkajunk
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    142 years ago

    Nobara is a great suggestion by @el_gringo_loco@lemmy.one, but I’d also throw out a suggestion for Bazzite if you want the “SteamOS”/Steam Deck experience.

    It does have the KDE desktop environment underneath to do all the non-gaming stuff as well, but if gaming is your number one focus, it’s a pretty cool setup.

    • @Grass@sh.itjust.works
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      22 years ago

      It just boots to desktop unless you have AMD GPU and install the deck edition to a regular PC. Seconding the rec though. It has become my main.

  • @bustrpoindextr@lemmy.world
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    112 years ago

    IMO, the best distro is going to be whatever you’re most comfortable with (given it’s still getting updates blah blah blah). Some might be easier in the get go but if they do wonky things (compared to what you’re used to) an update might really screw you up and leave you in a situation where you’re doing a lot of research.

    For the most part, you can make any distro do whatever you want, but if you understand one much better than the rest, use that.

  • 👁️👄👁️
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    102 years ago

    One that is relatively up to date with their graphics drivers. Then just install steam/lutris flatpaks and go crazy. Performance difference is pretty much negligible once it’s set up.

  • @ssboomman@lemm.ee
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    92 years ago

    Unpopular opinion but ubuntu.

    You will eventually run into an error you have never seen before and and someone using ubuntu has already solved it and posted it online somewhere.

    • @CaptDust@sh.itjust.works
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      52 years ago

      Counter point, Ubuntu specifically has so many old posts and answers that aren’t necessary in modern systems, deprecated, or straight up no longer correct. Also a lot of recommendations that can screw up a system in strange ways. I feel like many issues (ie. Bluetooth, USB, Wifi) are due to people stumbling on old posts with configs and tools that have changed and blindly applying them

    • billwashere
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      32 years ago

      Well having personally dealt with the Redhat and Ubuntu fiascos there are some that are clearly better than others 🤣

      I would say that some are better dealing with certain hardware better than others. But you are right, it’s all Linux so any distro could be made to work.

  • @PanaX@lemmy.ml
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    72 years ago

    Having tried many, I found that the desktop environments matter more than the actual OS, especially on older machines.

    Going for something really light, like openbox, lxde, or xfce, caused less frame rate drop and stuttering. At least on my lower powered mini pc.

    • @Sentau@feddit.de
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      2 years ago

      I have got an old shit laptop and I don’t see this. Can you verify this using mangohud¿?

      • @PanaX@lemmy.ml
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        12 years ago

        I had a beelink ser5, and without giving you the bench marks, I can tell you that many games that were unplayable on cinnamon or kde, did work in openbox. I would log out and back into that DE just to play games.

        Just my observation. I have upgraded my PC so I haven’t needed to repeat that with my new one.

  • @Yerbouti@lemmy.ml
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    42 years ago

    I have an NVIDIA and I dont understand why everyone says its buggy. What kind of problems are people having? I use Nobara for AV work + gaming, it installs the propritary drivers automatically. The few games I’ve tried worked flawless, better then on Windows on the same machine. There’s one game I’ve tried were I had to switch to X11 but all the others works on Wayland.

    • Rustmilian
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      2 years ago

      It depends on your card & if you’re using Nouveau or the proprietary driver. NVIDIA has always been far behind in terms of Wayland compatibility when compared to AMD or Intel. Recently they seem to be putting in a lot more effort and now after Fedora officially announced that they will be dropping X11 by default in the KDE Plasma 6 Fedora Spin 18 months from now, they’re likely going to be trying much harder as Fedora sets the precedent. Even if it works on your hardware rn, that doesn’t mean it’s yet feature complete or bug-less.

    • Solar Bear
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      32 years ago

      It’s far better than it used to be. They didn’t get the reputation for no reason. There were lots of Nvidia-specific bugs that have been slowly sorted out over the years. I’m told Wayland is even in a roughly usable state now. But it takes a lot of time to regain the lost trust. Let’s see how long it takes them to support HDR, and what that support looks like.

      • Radioactive Radio
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        32 years ago

        Well up until the last driver version I was scared of putting my lappy to suspend cuz it wouldn’t wake up sometimes and I’d have to directly power off sometimes causing a kernel panic. 545 was a blessing.

    • @fschaupp@lemmy.ml
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      32 years ago

      Nowerdays Nvidia starts to care about Linux an Nobara is doing a great job to care too. There was a long, rocky road to get to this point 😎

  • 🦄🦄🦄
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    42 years ago

    I wondered the same thing a couple months back and settled on EndeavourOS. No complains so far :)

    • BaroqueInMind
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      2 years ago

      To anyone wondering why, it is because it is Arch linux with pre-configured drivers and also it is one of the few distros that are on the bleeding edge of updates and features. Bleeding edge because one update might cut you and break everything for no reason. That being said, I’ve used Arch for almost a decade for my gaming PC and never had huge issues that reverting to the previous kernel at reboot did not fix.

  • billwashere
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    42 years ago

    Personally if it were me and gaming was my primary focus, I’d go to the place that’s doing the most with gaming and Linux, SteamOS.

    There are lots of sites that go through the process of building a Linux gaming machine using SteamOS.

    Here’s just one random video I found (not affiliated with this at all) about using an old optiplex from eBay, some ram upgrades, and a RX580 GPU. Apparently they did this for $150 but take that with a grain of salt. Hope this helps.

    https://youtu.be/jFIgQ9zgXOk?si=ZR9VzF1YtFewcWIM

  • @Holzkohlen@feddit.de
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    42 years ago

    It’s Garuda Linux shilling time. Seriously tho the distro does not matter when it comes to gaming (at least not much)

  • technologicalcaveman
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    32 years ago

    Whatever you know best. My personal choice of distro is Gentoo, my gaming pc and my carry laptop both run it. My games run great in gentoo, and because I understand it best, I deal with few issues. For a long time it was Arch, and before that Ubuntu. I used Ubuntu for only maybe 2 months before moving onto Arch then Gentoo. My games always worked, but once I really understood Linux, they ran great.

  • Atemu
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    32 years ago

    Any distro that ships relatively recent libraries and kernels.

    With the exception of Debian, RHEL, SLES and the like, pretty much everything.

  • @signor@lemmy.world
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    32 years ago

    Just plain ol Fedora. Lots of recommends for Nobara but I doubt the performance increase from the tweaks will make much of a difference with modern hardware. I went down the “gaming distro” path years ago and it’s just not worth it imo. You do you though because whatever distro you’ll still be in go ol’ Linux.