Heya! I’m looking to install Linux for the first time on parts from my old pc builds to use as a media centre and multiplayer gaming system in my living room. Something with as clean as possible interface with room for customization would be cool. Oh and support for my old nvidia gpu.

I’m also looking for general tips and advice for beginners if anyone has some to share.

  • @BassTurd@lemmy.world
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    92 years ago

    I switched to Linux and have no issues with gaming. There are a couple of settings that need tweaked in steam, but it doesn’t take a computer genius to figure it out, just follow a guide or video.

    For a beginner something like Mint might be the easiest transition. I went with Garuda myself, and it’s worked well, but I feel it’s probably a little less intuitive that something like Mint.

    For gaming, look into proton, and how to have your games run with it and you’ll probably be fine. Keep your windows key on hand in case you decide to revert.

  • @alt@lemmy.ml
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    72 years ago

    to use as a media centre and multiplayer gaming system in my living room

    Based on this, you’re basically looking for the ‘game console experience on your couch’. If that’s the case, honestly you shouldn’t look beyond[1] Bazzite.

    If, instead, you actually wanted to play retro games primarily, then please let us know.


    1. While ChimeraOS and HoloISO also offer the ‘game console experience’, they don’t support Nvidia GPUs. So you would be on your own at best; which would be a horrible experience for a new user. If you feel particularly adventurous, then Jovian-NixOS is actually another option. But arguably less newbie-friendly compared to Bazzite.
    • @BroBot9000@lemmy.worldOP
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      32 years ago

      Thanks so much for the tips!

      I’d definitely like to get some of the classic multiplayer games running on emulators as well.

      • @alt@lemmy.ml
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        2 years ago

        I’d definitely like to get some of the classic multiplayer games running on emulators as well.

        Bazzite does allow easy install of EmuDeck and RetroDECK during first installation, which should cover most of your emulation needs. For completeness’ sake; Batocera does exist. However, I’m not sure if it runs e.g. Steam games as good as Bazzite runs retro games.

  • @const_void@lemmy.ml
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    62 years ago

    There’s no that much difference between distros except for the package manager. Choose whichever one is best for you.

  • Nobara could be a great choice for your setup. It’s a version of Fedora, made by a very well respected Fedora team member, setup with gaming in mind. It comes with many of the drivers you’d have to download using most other distros. Being Fedora based means you can tinker with anything you wanted to change. I recommend the KDE spin, KDE is known as the swiss army knife of environments. It’s super intuitive too. I’m actually in a bit of an emulator phase right now, I have had zero issues using KDE Fedora while figuring it all out!

  • @flashgnash@lemm.ee
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    22 years ago

    If your main concern is UI distro doesn’t really matter, the thing you need to think about is desktop environment, most big distros let you choose from a few

    TL;Dr I would suggest looking for a distro with kde plasma as it’s quite customisable and looks quite clean out of the box. Personally I prefer gnome out of the two but you definitely hit a wall eventually customising it

    Gnome is what Ubuntu and fedora use by default I believe and looks somewhat like Mac (but is fairly distinct from everything else, you kinda have to see for yourself)

    KDE Plasma is what the steam deck uses in desktop mode and looks kinda like modern windows.

    Cinnamon is what Linux mint uses which also looks like windows 10 and is designed to appeal to windows users

    Pop!os recently released their own DE called cosmic, but they were originally using their own customised version of gnome

  • Nik282000
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    22 years ago

    Easy mode: LMDE/Mint. They are all geared towards a good user experience and trying to keep you out of the terminal. I would recommend them to any new Linux user.

    For a slightly more advanced experience, Debian with XFCE as the desktop. The installation is slightly less friendly and they expect you to be familiar with using the terminal and tinkering with the guts of your OS from time to time but you can have a ‘lighter’ installation with less background services. (I run Debian on all my machines so I have a bias towards Debian and LMDE).

  • @GustavoM@lemmy.world
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    12 years ago

    I’m also looking for general tips and advice for beginners if anyone has some to share.

    The only thing that is stopping a Windows user from becoming a Linux user is the package manager – learn how to use it in the cli. Then the "rest’ should be an obvious, flat curve (which “package” goes for video card, audio, etcetc).

    • @gerdesj@lemmy.ml
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      12 years ago

      Windows’s package managers are MS only (ish). msiexec is a bit of a convoluted pain compared to apt, yum, pacman or even portage.

      When you update a Linux box, everything is updated not just the OS. That is not the case on Windows where each browser, pdf viewer etc has its own updater service or not.

      I’ve been doing IT software monkeying for several decades for many companies, some of which you will have heard of. Trust me: the Windows model is not the best. It certainly should not be a reason to fear Linux.

      Most distros have a “Politely notify that some updates are available, would you mind awfully if I install them?” … cracks on in the background and then suggests a reboot only if the kernel was updated.

      That is not a Windows experience.

  • auth
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    -12 years ago

    Just install your fav distro and install whatever you need

      • auth
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        2 years ago

        They are mostl all about the same (the major ones)… Different package managers and other differences but basically the same

      • auth
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        2 years ago

        I used more than 10 distros and don’t really notice that much difference is my point

  • rhabarba
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    -142 years ago

    Linux is probably not the wisest choice for gaming - that would still be Windows. Anyway, the distribution does not matter that much. You can install most Linux and cross-platform software on most distributions. Do not choose your system because of what comes as the default desktop, default package set et cetera. Try a few ones. Read some reviews.

    • @woelkchen@lemmy.world
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      02 years ago

      Go and tell your exciting information to Valve. They’ll certainly appreciate your input how Steam Deck with SteamOS is dead in the water.