• @BURN
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    31 year ago

    Anti-cheats block Linux. EAC theoretically supports it, but from what I can tell it’s a less secure option for both windows and Linux, ensuring a lot of devs never turn it on.

    Also idk what it is, but proton performance seems to be ~1/2-1/3 of what I get on native windows for pretty much every game. Had to give up on BG3 on Linux after I maxed out at ~40fps and huge stutters.

    • @ichbinjasokreativ
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      01 year ago

      Then there’s something wrong with your setup. At most, I’ve seen 20% fps loss through proton.

      • @BURN
        link
        01 year ago

        I’m sure there is, but after a few hours of trying to get it to work it wasn’t worth it anymore and no tweaking was necessary to make it work perfectly on windows.

        This is the 3rd time I’ve had the same issue. Major fps drops in every game played. This has happened over multiple Distros and multiple years. I don’t enjoy having to spend hours configuring a game just to make it run 20% worse than if I just installed it on windows.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      01 year ago

      Maybe we have different standards, but i am more than happy with 20-25 fps on low to medium settings.

      Also, most competetive games that i know run on very old machines without that much issues.

      • @BURN
        link
        31 year ago

        Destiny 2 explicitly says they’ll never support Linux. Same with CoD. Older competitive games run without issue. Newer ones done.

        Minimum acceptable performance for me is 4k/120fps on medium/high settings. (I have a 3090)

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          21 year ago

          You categorize those games as competetive? Interesting. But yes, publisher too lazy to implement eac for linux will always be a problem.

          Also, fun fact, bungie was more than happy to make a destiny 2 port for stadia… which ran exclusively on linux.