Alt text: Trojan Horse meme, Steam Deck bringing Linux to Windows gamers
Steam deck was the main draw of moving away from windows after the security updates for 10 end in october
Gnu manifesto + linux
This is actually how it happened for me.
web dev 🤝 steam deck
Opinion: Games that have “linux support” but explicitly check for Steam Deck hardware should have a disclaimer on the store page or even have their Steam Deck verified status revoked.
You know some games that do that?
There’s a post every so often on !linux_gaming@lemmy.world
It’s true! Since getting a steamdeck I have tried 1) SteamOS (obviously), 2) Mint Cinnamon, and 3) Elementary. I run my plex server on a Beelink running Elementary, Mint I’ve left because I’m coming from MacOS and don’t necessarily want a Windows experience, but it was solid!
Building a computer now and planning on running Bazzite exclusively on it :)
id recommend AMD GPU not just because its drivers are open source but they usually have a bit more VRAM which actually matters.
Got a 9070 🤗
gigachad
I’ve loved using Linux on my steamdeck to game, but sadly I cant really switch because of lossless scaling. LSFG is too good to stop using, and there’s no Linux equivalent. not even afmf2 works on linux
Use whatever you want
Don’t let the Linux fans try to tell you that Linux is somehow this amazing thing.
Linux is, in general far better than windows in my experience. its just that certain must-have applications are only available on windows
You are allowed to use both
allowed, yes. but switching between multiple operating systems on the same device is simply a pain in the ass.
Is it really that bad, though? Compared to spending hours fighting with 3rd party drivers or wine or etc. every time there’s a change to the software in question, restarting to a different partition is pretty trivial. Configure both OSs to mirror non-sys files to network storage or a shared partition (and there’s plenty of ready-made utilities for this) and it’s honestly a pretty easy solution to being stuck with “iNdUsTrY sTaNdArD” software.
I get where you’re coming from, I do. The only reason I’m saying this is because the difficulty in dual booting is often brought up when discussing switching, and it really discourages people that are curious about trying linux (but are still tied to the apple/M$ world) from making the switch when they’re constantly told how hard it is to use both.
It is amazing, but it doesn’t mean it’s amazing at everything. You don’t need to throw the baby out with the bathwater.
And it CAN fix all your problems. But that doesn’t mean you don’t have to fix the problems yourself.
Which is often more than I can deal with. Thankfully - so far at least - all my problems are problems other people have encountered and have documented (and - in many cases - contributed to various projects to get the fix to more people)
Gamescope is technically lossless scaling without the framegen. Technically it should be possible to add to gamescope.
yes, but lossless scaling is closed source and the developer has decided not to try adding Linux support. supposedly its because of it’s reliance on windows capture apis
there are many games i play that dont work on Linux systems
Which ones, genuinely curious?
online multiplayer games with anti cheat
Not entirely true, Easy Anti Cheat which is commonly used, works under Linux and is auto installed by Steam.
Pretty much every online competitive game cuz they all use invasive anti cheats and scapegoat linux as the cheater platform.
CS2 is the only outlier that I know of (VAC is server side mostly & CS2 is native anyways so). Probably some other games that are linux friendly too, but 99% are not.
I mean league of legends does work on linux, though maybe not as “plug and play” as other titles. But yeah I get your point, if you want ro play Rainbow six siege or equivalents ten you’re probably out of luck, at least for now.
Yeah here’s to hoping these game devs/publishers get their heads on straight when we all move to linux and stop playing their games because of lack of support.
That’s the thought I use to cope anyways ;(
CS2 FaceIT, Tarkov, CoD, Le Mans Ultimate
I’ll start with Fortnite. Hate on it if you want but my kids and wife play it and I enjoy playing with them even if I don’t much care for it myself.
Kernel level anti cheat is such crap.
Windows user here.
Idgaf as long as it works and isn’t shit. If it has lots of cool clever stuff, all the better.
Most vendor software works the best on Windows.
Windows also generally has the best compatibility. I always keep at least one Windows 11 VM to install various things in.
Have you run some demanding games in that VM? And what virtualisation have you been using?
I’ve been thinking about trying that out with QEMU/KVM.
Definitely not trivial to do. You need to use GPU passthrough to allow a VM to have a GPU, which requires manually figuring out a whole bunch of PCI addresses, among other technical things. If you fear the terminal, you will have a bad time.
Thanks for letting me know! That’s one thing I was worried about, but I may very well give it a shot anyway. Luckily, I’m not opposed to messing in the terminal, I do it for work nearly every day :P Messing with PCI Addresses would be new though!
You need a GPU if you want to run demanding games
It is feasible but it takes some tinkering
Windows is shit tho. Has been for a long time now.
I’m a power user, I don’t even want to upgrade or have to reinstall because of how much shit I’ve gone through to get it to this point. Easily a decade old install and very active use. I would lose so much random stuff if I ever had to upgrade or switch. Windows is shit and Microsoft are total bastards for that, there’s no denying it. But for me, it is not so simple as one being better or worse. Maybe if I were in a stage to switch I’d consider it, but still windows is not without its own offerings/positives.
Slowly switching may be an option for you. You could always dual boot a Linux distro alongside your current Windows install.
Then once you have Linux running with all your apps, etc, you can see what you’re missing from your Windows install and if you can move stuff over, etc.
You could even try it in a VM, see if you can set it up in a VM to how you like first before doing the whole install, may or may not be a bit easier (easier in the sense that you can directly compare whatever you do on Windows with the Linux install in a vm).
Why would they want to switch to Linux if Windows works for them?
It takes a lot of effort
They don’t have to, I was simply providing a solution to a problem they don’t have.
If they want to, but can’t because of they decade old configurations, this solution could ease the process or allow them to figure out if it’s even a possibility.
Basically just letting them know they can try it without destructing their existing Windows setup.
That’s a totally valid path. Which I kinda already do. I have a few distros that I either vm or use as repair/emergency spaces because they’re different and so reliable. Oh what’s that? The index of my os drive is corrupted because I did something stupid? UBUNTU TIME.
But honestly, the amount of pirated software that I’ve gotten to work and all my sql databases and workstation software and licences that work are things that I probably can’t get again. There’s so much stuff. Like I have an installation of postman with almost a decade of just temporarily saved api settings, or that all of my vsts are all setup nearly exactly as I want, or that my Firefox has the css and extensions and settings in those extensions set. That stuff just doesn’t sync.
I could maybe go through and methodically cut out each and every thing, but chances are, you really can’t, it won’t translate, and I’ll forget all kinds of stuff. I’m honestly panicking about losing windows 10 at the end of this year. I REALLY don’t want to switch to windows 11 and deeply deeply hate Microsoft for taking back their word that windows 10 would be the last windows. I’ll never forgive them for that, even though I basically knew they were going to.
Anyways, your idea is a good one, but I’ve already tried it and several distros. I probably won’t switch to linux or mac os because there’s just too much obscure stuff that I use that is either not on Linux/MacOS or is so old that I’m using compatibility and will never ever be updated. I really have tried to use linux before, even the big main distros and the really heavyweights.
Unreal, unity, wwise, visual studio, cubase, protools, flstudio, and a bunch of other editors and stuff that I use all the time, including all kinds of bullshit in ms office (like api extensions and inter-database calculations and backend extensions some that I’ve written!), either don’t have support or the support is worse that it already is on Windows. I’m already trying to keep from blowing my brains out with windows things and keeping them stable. I already have waayyyy too much work to do. Switching os’s is like… Fuck. I don’t have the time for that.
There is no good os for me. They are all all shit. But right now, the one I’ve got, and all the work I’ve put INTO it, is the closest.
Trying to get me to switch to Linux is like going up to the front door of a mad wizard’s lair or castle or something, and being like, “Have you thought about perhaps you might want to build a new house? Our construction company that builds these nice little boutique custom homes could help you with that. We use sustainable, green, all kosher materials, and you can build it however you want!” Like I’m sure for other people that would be great. Or if mine ever explodes and I have to start over (it already regularly explodes).
I’m lucky all the apps I use worked on linux when I swapped over, native or otherwise (through wine).
Sounds like if you fully migrated over, you’d have to give up quite a lot of software and relearn different tools, which is probably close to impossible (given the ones you listed).
Hope the Windows 11 transition is at least a smooth one for you!
If your OS is so brittle that you can’t upgrade it without “losing so much random stuff,” you’re not standing on solid ground, and I’d argue "it doesn’t work properly either. You’re basically balancing on a house of cards that, and eventually it will fall, and it won’t be pretty. Do yourself a favour and switch to a more future-proof solution, now that you still have proper access to your data. Future you will most likely thank yourself.
Lol you aren’t entirely wrong. You do sound kind’ve like a used car salesperson though hahaha.
The user who responded to you is basically my response though. Plus, I’m used to fixing this house of cards, even if I cry whenever it bsod’s or whatever.
Between 2019 and 2023 I troubleshot so many things to try to figure out what was breaking in my computer. Over that time, I rma’d almost all of the core hardware because it failed or seemed like it was failing. The last piece I rma’d was my gpu, an EVGA 3090. It was causing so many problems. Yet, my partner’s EVGA 3080 still runs fine to this day.
My point is, it’s not always the OS. For me, it’s because of a lot of sketchy shit I do and old hardware that barely works. For example, I’m using a VERY nice but very old firewire audio interface.
Also, I’m not as worried about losing my data, that’ll exist on drives and can be pulled off.
Lol yeah fair point.
My main concern was that a fair amount of people tend to customize their windows install into oblivion and end up loosing their data. Did it myself before I learned my lesson 😅
Took me a while to realise Linux was the solution all my issues, been very happy since! But ofc, whatever works for you is good enough, sounds like u know what you’re doing.
I have rainmeter and wallpaper engine, but those things are so unreliable resource hogs and old, that, while neat, aren’t worth spending any emotional energy on. But again, I have, mostly just to see the limits of the thing, and have some nifty tools out of them. I wouldn’t be that beat up if I lost them at this point, and probably wouldn’t install them again unless great strides were made in the underlying tech and efficiency. But brute force pinging stuff that wasn’t made to be pinged ten times a second is just… Maybe in the future, core systems will have data i/o just for this sort of stuff XD who am I kidding?
Linux would definitely solve some of my issues, but introduce like a million others. It’s just an os (or rather, a variety of versions of an os), just like mac or windows. I hold no zeal for any, and do know in my heart that someday, I’ll likely switch to Linux and put forth the energy. But I’m not that young anymore and there are things I have to do, mountains to climb, grass to feel, people to taste, politics to survive, teeth to brush, all kinds of mortality to fight, shows to watch, music to make, parents to try to love before they’re gone, siblings to fix, friends to make, places to go… Linux is pretty far down that list.
It’s on the list, just… Not that high. Higher than MacOS hahaha
If you have a 10 year old Linux intall you wouldn’t want that to go away either. That has nothing to do with the OS.
Stop being so “aggressive” against people’s and let them have their own opinion. It is not helping to get others to get to Linux. What does help is to show people how it can be done.
If there was a way I could like magically gender-swap my pc from Windows to Linux, I’d absolutely try it.
Like take all the programs, and scrape all the internal data and stuff and move it to Linux. Take all the settings and logins and customizations from my ide’s and workstations and drives and directories and symlinks and apos and drivers.
God. That would be like a dream. Just press one button, and copy a system but switch its fundamental kernaling and systems or whatever. Honestly, that ease and already-built-up-systems-and-tools is part of the reason that I LIKE Windows.
Some Linux distros have things like that, but they fall very short of the robustness of windows’s job in these regards. Like, except for all of the MASSIVE GLARING PRIVACY AND ETHICAL PROBLEMS that the windows 11 upgrade kindly offers without compromise, it kind of is like that magical switch.
But you’ve gotta realize HOW much I hate having to tear things out and add things and set them up again. It’s a MASSIVE waste of time to me. And switching to an os that has less options and comes with none? That’s madness to me. Absolute madness. Things running through my head about how to get certain midi controllers to work and stacking audio apos on each other reliably with minimal lag and routing in software… Ughghh… It was hard enough in Windows. I’m traumatized. And I bet random things all over just wouldn’t work.
I’m one of those people that feels limited by my 32thread 128gb ram system. My next build will likely be either epyc or threadripper. Unless the tech (hardware) industry is just nuked from orbit by our inbred nazi conservative drooling overlords. Times are a’ changin’.
Dual booting Linux and Windows can really help to move your operation to Linux. I have been using Linux machiens besides my main for a while and now in the proces of moving to Mint. I won’t be able to move everything and some things are more annoying (like Nvdia GPU drivers), but the vast majority is easy. Especially because most people these days work in browsers for the most part. I (and probably you from the sound of it) are one of the few who still use a lot of desktop apps.
Running an os, then a browser, then everything through a browser feels… Like an unnecessary middle man.
But no one keeps a 10 year Linux install when upgrading is a trivial command. That’s the whole point.
Also, this is advice you’re already being given for free, no one here cares if you stay on Windows or not. No one is going to help you more than that.
You are missing the point and for some reason bring up the non updating.
It’s about the switching from something you know and customized for 10 years to something new.
The first mistake is not keeping your 10 year old installation updated
There a Debian installs that are like 20 years old. They have been continuously updated over time.
An old install doesn’t mean no updates
Yeah I’m not really sure why an old install means not updating it or anything on it.
Also, just because it’s windows, doesn’t mean there aren’t package managers. And I DON’T want to update a ton of stuff for production reasons. I’m not sitting over here blindly. Are there are a lot of Linux users that think Windows users are morons or something?
That’s not even a discussion if it was or wasn’t update
Doesn’t it run on Arch? Crazy to think there’s a bunch of Arch users that don’t say they use arch btw
It is but it’s a Valve managed version of Arch. It will get recent packages but not as cutting edge as upstream Arch.
It isn’t true Arch though, so the Arch forums would never accept them. They would have to go install from scratch to be able to get “I use arch btw” badge.
I use endeavouros btw.
True Arch: you write the image to the usb stick yourself, boot it on bare hardware, and don’t use archinstall. This is the minimum requirement BTW. If you use archinstall you can only use “btw” in lowercase. /s
I use Stearch btw
I eat starch btw
There isn’t some magic to this. Someone puts out a game thats as popular as say bg3 but doesn’t run on steam deck and all these memes will go away overnight. Just hope that doesn’t happen.
Well, I feel like the Steam Deck has partially positioned itself as just a convenience device. I imagine quite some folks have it in addition to their (Windows) gaming PC and just use it on the couch or when travelling.
In particular, the genre most likely to cause problems are competitive games (because anti-cheat freaks out when it notices slight differences compared to real Windows). And it wouldn’t be my first thought to buy a Steam Deck to play those, simply because the screen is small and the primary controls aren’t mouse+keyboard (even though you can of course dock the Steam Deck)
I got both. Of it doesn’t run wel on the deck, I just stream it from the PC.
Linux is the crab of the digital world, eventually everything turns into it.
That would be unix then :)
Why would it be?
Linux, BSD, macOS, iOS, Android, QNX and so on are all Unix-like operating systems. Windows is the only widely used OS that’s not Unix-like.
They were posix certified at some point.
No idea why, but microsoft did go through the hoops to get that.
In practice posix functionality did not work. But they did have a paper saying it generally should.Like ms word and iso.
Ah I figured the monolithic kernel would make it opposite to the unix philosophy.
It’s not Linux it’s steam os…
You are kidding, right? Right?
Yes I was hence the “…” , least a few people got to have the satisfaction of being right on the internet above having a laugh
I believe the “…” had very different meanings from country to country. At least in my experience. In my country its an indication of something bad. Such as:
“I just missed the train by 1min…”
or
“I crashed my car today…”
Which is downstream from Arch. Checkmate atheists
Steam deck gave me the courage to dump Windows 10 for Endeavour OS. Very happy so far.
Fellow EOS user, glad to hear you’re enjoying yourself. Just make sure to check the news on the Arch website before updating, sometimes an extra step gets thrown in and you don’t wanna bork your system. I’d say use Informant, but it’s been giving me shit
Where are those? There isn’t much on the main page.
When I used Manjaro, there were threads for each major update. Known issues, known issues from past updates (if you didn’t get those yet), poll to see the update quality and a discussion thread.
E.g. the most recent one: https://forum.manjaro.org/t/stable-update-2025-04-12-kernels-plasma-systemd-mesa-grub-wine/176877
Gaben you sneaky devil