This may not be a Linux specific problem as I had the exact same issue earlier with Windows 7 and it’s one of the reasons I installed Linux in the first place.

The specific game I’m trying to play is DayZ but it may not be issue specific to this game. It worked flawlessly untill this point. I had made no changes to anything. Basically when I try to launch the game it starts loading up normally and then just apparently quits and the “Play” button goes back green. No error, no black screen, no freezing or anything. It just stops launching the game.

I’ve tried checking the integrity of files, deleting downloads catche, disabling steam cloud, removing launch options… nothing. Almost like it gets blocked by firewall or something. However I feel like it may be an issue with steam itself or then it’s a hardware issue (I’ve got really old PC)

Few things I’ve noticed that may or may not be related:

  • When opening up steam it almost always used to download some updates first and check the integrity of them or something. Now it doesn’t. It just opens up Steam. When I click “check for updates” it says everything is up to date.

  • The firmware updater shows available updates for my SSD and HDD but no option to update. I also tried with sudo fwupdmgr get-devices but it says “UEFI firmware can not be updated in legacy BIOS mode See https://github.com/fwupd/fwupd/wiki/PluginFlag:legacy-bios for more information.”

  • In the privacy settings it says “checks failed” and gives me this message:

  • I’ve tried reinstalling Proton BattlEye Runtime but it wont let me uninstall it and says “missing shared content”
  • Para_lyzed
    link
    24 months ago

    If you were to open the Software & Updates app and go to Additional Drivers, does the driver package you tested say it comes from Nvidia and it is “(proprietary, tested)”? If so, then your drivers should be fine. nvidia-driver-libs:i386 is 32-bit, so I don’t know why you would need that installed unless DayZ is only compatible with 32-bit drivers for some reason. I have Steam installed on my Fedora install, and I don’t have any 32-bit Nvidia drivers installed but everything works perfectly. That’s a separate issue altogether, and I don’t recommend running 32-bit drivers unless your system is 32-bit. Can you copy the “System Details” window in the About tab of the Settings app? It should have Hardware and Software information like the CPU, GPU, windowing system, etc. There are a few things that could cause issues that I might be able to glean from that.

    I’m on Fedora, but since it’s running Gnome it should theoretically look the same. You access the system details here:

    SystemDetails

    CopySystemDetails

    Here’s what mine looks like for reference:

    System Details Report


    Report details

    • Date generated: 2024-01-10 07:58:06

    Hardware Information:

    • Hardware Model: ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. ASUS TUF Dash F15 FX516PM_FX516PM
    • Memory: 16.0 GiB
    • Processor: 11th Gen Intel® Core™ i7-11370H × 8
    • Graphics: Intel® Xe Graphics (TGL GT2)
    • Graphics 1: NVIDIA GeForce RTX™ 3060 Laptop GPU
    • Disk Capacity: 1.0 TB

    Software Information:

    • Firmware Version: FX516PM.329
    • OS Name: Fedora Linux 39 (Workstation Edition)
    • OS Build: (null)
    • OS Type: 64-bit
    • GNOME Version: 45.2
    • Windowing System: X11
    • Kernel Version: Linux 6.6.9-200.fc39.x86_64

    To uninstall the steam snap, you should be able to open up a terminal and type the following:

    sudo snap remove steam
    

    And assuming that works, to install the native version of Steam (which should be what’s installed anyway, but Canonical is pushing their proprietary snap BS that has never worked well), this should apparently work (I don’t have an Ubuntu install to test on though):

    sudo add-apt-repository multiverse
    sudo apt update
    sudo apt install steam
    

    If it prompts you for anything, you can just confirm by typing “y”. I’d recommend you check that it isn’t installing the snap version, but I don’t know how to guide you to do that, really. I haven’t used a distro with the Aptitude package manager in over 5 years.

    Of course, it probably isn’t helpful, but I’d recommend avoiding vanilla Ubuntu if you aren’t already too deeply invested. Linux Mint seems to be a common recommendation for new users and it’s based off Ubuntu, but in all honesty I’d probably recommend Nobara (gaming focused and more user friendly version of Fedora). That way you don’t get snaps shoved down your throat by Canonical, which break things constantly. Up to you if you want to install another OS though; in theory you shouldn’t need to, and there should be a way to resolve these issues with your current install.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      4 months ago

      Yeah the unistallation gets stuck with terminal aswell. It managed to break steam so it no longer opens but wont remove it either. Guess I’ll just try and install it again via terminal nevertheless.

      • Para_lyzed
        link
        14 months ago

        Unless it errors out, it should eventually finish. But if you cancelled it, then just purge remove the snap like the following:

        sudo snap remove --purge steam
        

        That should skip the data backup when removing. I’ve seen reports of other users that this backup process sometimes takes 10-20 minutes with the default remove command, even with small programs. Blame Canonical for that one.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          4 months ago

          I wonder if this command would clear out the remaining files from the snap install that appears to have been left behind? Since the game is now working I’m afraid to tweak anything more so that I don’t mess it up again

          • Para_lyzed
            link
            24 months ago

            No, it wouldn’t since the steam snap isn’t installed anymore. But you can clear out the left over snapshot of it manually. Just use sudo snap saved, find the entry that says steam, and sudo snap forget

            If there is no steam entry listed, then there’s nothing else you have to do.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      4 months ago

      The drivers I had before were proprietary and tested but the ones I updated to now (545) are just proprietary. Earlier I got this message so that’s why I’m trying to install the 32 bit drivers too though it worked just fine before without them.

      Here’s my system info. I’ll try uninstalling steam again now.

      System Details Report


      Report details

      • Date generated: 2024-01-10 18:28:58

      Hardware Information:

      • Hardware Model: ASUSTeK Computer INC. P5Q-PRO
      • Memory: 12.0 GiB
      • Processor: Intel® Core™2 Quad Q9450 × 4
      • Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1660 SUPER
      • Disk Capacity: 1.5 TB

      Software Information:

      • Firmware Version: 1613
      • OS Name: Ubuntu 23.10
      • OS Build: (null)
      • OS Type: 64-bit
      • GNOME Version: 45.1
      • Windowing System: X11
      • Kernel Version: Linux 6.5.0-14-generic