this post was submitted on 22 Jul 2023
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Arch Linux

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I've been debating making the switch for a long time, but after spending like a week researching Proton, Lutris etc. on Linux, I decided to try it out and nuked my entire Windows 11 drive. :)

So far, every game I threw at it works perfectly fine, including Elden Ring & Cyberpunk.

I had to spend a little time troubleshooting some small issues but it's part of the fun!

Specs are in the neofetch, my compositor / WM is Wayfire (Wayland) :)

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[–] dusty@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 2 years ago (4 children)

Gaming on Linux has improved so much it's come to the point I only need windows for one game, that game being beamng.drive, and the only reason I ztill need windows for it is because for complicated reasons (that only the Dev team fully understands) the windows build runs like shit on proton, and the multiplayer mod for it won't run on Linux, or at least haven't figured out a way to make it run. Everything else? Perfect

Happy to have more Linux gamers on board

[–] GoodEye8@lemm.ee 2 points 2 years ago (2 children)

I just yesterday decided to give Linux a try and quickly switched back to Windows. The 2 main things preventing me from switching to Linux is the lack of proper HDR support and poor refresh rate support. I'm honestly bewildered that Linux doesn't have proper support for relatively common things that have been around for pretty much 2 decades. Hope those things get added soon

[–] person4268@lemm.ee 2 points 2 years ago

For VRR, using Plasma on Wayland seems to work just fine for me (after you enable it), as long as the game in question is in full screen; it doesn’t seem to trigger otherwise. I think I ran a mixed refresh rates setup once too (165hz and 60hz) and didn’t have any issues. Idk how X11 handles mixed refresh rates (if at all), but it definitely didn’t support VRR well if at all when I tried.

Re: HDR, yeah. Color management is also missing in Wayland (but present on X11) iirc.

(In case you didn’t know, there’s currently two display “servers”/protocols that are in popular use, X11 and Wayland. X11 is old and has screen tearing issues, but greater support in general. Wayland is newer and has far more isolation between programs, and aims to replace it (and Fedora already has made it default, iirc))

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