Just a speck this year, 2025 gonna be lit!
it ain’t much, but it’s honest…
it’s not really work, is it?
Probably gonna get a ton of hate, but…
I’d heard lots of pep talk about Linux being ready for gaming, so I tried Mint this year. Most of our Steam games didn’t work right. Lots of Googling, really tried to make it work, got some to work, but ultimate just went back to Windows - all games work out of the box.
Instead of having 2**32 distros and compatibility shims, y’all need to get behind a common ecosystem that laymen can get aboard… if you want Linux to proliferate. Unfortunately the chatter here really backfired for me.
Not gonna lie, you probably will get lots of hate, but fanboys will be fanboys, just ignore them.
In any case, this probably means you enjoy multiplayer AAA games, since as a general rule those are essentially the only ones that don’t work out of the box nowadays. Unfortunately those games are actively trying to detect if you’re using Linux to prevent you from playing, and if you had managed to play them you could have gotten yourself banned (like some users reported with some games).
The other large cause for problems is the wrong drivers or not using the correct GPU in multi-GPU systems. If you were having issues with games everyone else was playing in Linux this is likely the cause.
You choose Mint, which is an excellent beginner friendly distro, and it’s very close to Ubuntu which is the de-facto common ecosystem agreed to use. That discussion about having a common ecosystem was over a long time ago, it’s Ubuntu. But that doesn’t mean you’re stuck with that, it means that developers can focus on targeting one OS, and the community will figure out how to get it working in other variations when it doesn’t work out of the box. If it requires changes from the game we usually submit a bug report explaining what needs to be changed and why. But for you, the end-user, just having Ubuntu or something similar like Mint should get you a good experience since games are tested using that.
At the end of the day Linux is not for everyone, sometimes you want specific software that is not made for Linux and that’s okay (okay on your part, fuck the companies that are actively making software unusable on Linux).
Guess it depends on the games. I have no games in my collection that won’t run on Linux, either natively or via Proton. The only games I’m aware of where there are massive issues are ones incorporating certain forms of anti-cheat software.
Didn’t know this was visible yet. Mine should be a full (Linux) circle this year.
I honestly don’t even know how people have enough motivation to dual boot windows - you essentially need to maintain two full sets of your communications and browser stuff, where one is updated automatically, and the other … well yeah, windows is fucked up. And the few games I can’t play are shit anyway.
e cafes are more convenient (in places that have them for gaming) and “less” effort
I did it for about three months while I was getting used to Linux and I have a machine that I share with a Windows user so dual boot is necessary and for a while I was gaming on Windows and coding on Linux which was on an HDD but we got an NVMe SSD and now Linux is on there so gaming is no problem.
Sadly, they didn’t include this graph for people who played exclusively on Linux, unless some of it was on the Steam Deck.
Linux and Steam Deck are different platforms by Valve stats.
Join the 100% club!
A step toward freedom!
Welcome, there are dozens of us
That better be all purple by next year 😠
It doesn’t show up if it’s 100% purple though.
TUX4LYF
Sounds like a coupon code for 20% off on your next distro!
Where is this from?
Steam Replay
Steam’s year in review. Seems to be down at the moment though.
It was down due to everyone logging in to check the Steam Winter Sale and DDOSing the servers in the process.
Okay thanks.
Okay