I remember when Proton launched it was like magic playing games like Doom and Nier Automata straight from the Linux Steam client with excellent performance. I do not miss the days of having the Windows version of Steam installed separately.

  • Apollo2323@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 years ago

    True I just moved my gaming PC to Linux and wow!! Almost all of my games run on Linux. Thank you for everyone working so hard.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    2 years ago

    In the time I have been a Linux gamer, it has gone from “here is a list of games that work in Linux” to “here is a list of games that do not work in Linux.” Which some dictionaries define as “progress.”

  • Mossy Feathers (She/They)@pawb.social
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    2 years ago

    Serious question: how do nvidia drivers perform on Linux? I’ve heard they’re not very good and missing features. Anything I should know about? I have an RTX 3060ti that I use for both games and stuff like blender, substance designer/painter, etc.

  • cybersandwich@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    I agree with this meme 100%

    Unfortunately, the game I mainly play, apex legends, has started giving me all sorts of trouble this past year. I’m on PopOS so part of me wonders if it’s related to their focus on cosmic (or maybe they aren’t prioritizing fixing bugs?) But I also have no idea where the issue sits? Steam flat pack? Proton? Apex itself? PopOS? A weird config/setting on my machine?

    But it actually highlights this point of this post because instead of playing apex I have played starfield with a single crash around launch.

    • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Hmm, I’m a big Apex player myself on Linux, Nobara. Almost no issues for over a year now. What version of Proton are you using?

  • JustADragon@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    in my case pretty much all heavy games work much better on Linux than on windows(laptop came with windows, so tested before putting Linux on it and then compared). in many cases I get around 1.5 to 2 times the performance, stability is also much greater, this is both for new and old games. that said I tend to avoid those games with insane mallware(drm) in it.

    system uses a apu and has only 16gb ram and 1.5tb nvme ssd. so might also be it has a much bigger effects on APU since Linux handles ram much better. but if a system suffers from other similar bottlenecks like: storage, ram, compute, TDP and thermal, etc. problems should also result in much better performance when switching to Linux. I guess the only exception would be if the GPU compute power would litterally 100% be the only bottleneck, or close to that, but in a APU(where one might assume games to be heavily bottlenecked by GPU compute power) GNU+Linux gives much better performance.

    also this was tested on Garuda Linux KDE Dragonized edition, and changed the kernel to a newer one since by default it will use a kernel optimized or first gen ryzen. which gives some issues and lower performance.

  • Aux@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Short time? Proton is built around Wine, which is 30 years old. 30 years is not a short time.

    • newIdentity@sh.itjust.works
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      2 years ago

      Remember the wine days where proton didn’t exist? Barely any game was playable.

      We got from unplayable to “download and play” within 5 years