I hate when people say that they’ll only move when it has 100% support
People who say ‘cant wait for steamOS to come out so that I can move to it’ is also very similar
They never will try Linux, even if what they want comes true
They won’t do it, whether they just fear change or think it’ll break stuff or they can’t bother
And I’m not going to lie, I don’t hate them or debate with them for it, I just hate the bold lies they tell just to get with the crowd
“Fuck you Microsoft, I’m moving to Linux” says the individual that would never move if they haven’t already
Frankly, I probably wouldn’t move either if Windows didn’t permanently break my ethernet and WiFi drivers, and reinstalling windows wasn’t harder than installing Linux, fucking hell
Either way, these people kick up hype for a Linux that will be so much bigger but they never arrive
Maybe they will, due in fucking 2028 or something when they invent a really easy way to use built in Linux tools to move your files from NTFS to Linux and then when you launch steam you have a perfect library of Linux compatible games that are as good or better than windows
And don’t lie, even now with 80% compatibility it feels more like 60%, whether because it depends on the system one runs or because the performance drops just make it not worth it…
At least don’t lie that you’ll move to Linux at a goal post that you’ll just move whenever you get close, maybe say that you’ll move to Linux when you finally get a new pc with a new disk or something?
Since ProtonDB (and obviously Proton itself, Wine with its own WineApp DB, SteamOS) there is an easy way to check if your favorite games do work. That being said I understand that people are afraid. They might think “OK… well Elden Ring works but what about the DLC, or upcoming Elden Ring Nightreign?” and believe, probably rightfully so to be honest, that because Windows is still the most popular OS for gaming on PC and that game publishers are economically rational actors, more testing and fixes will be done against that target platform.
So… 100% is a ridiculous coverage because it’s impractical but IMHO they are not that silly to “want” it. It’s just a simpler way to say they are scared and do not want to bother. They would rather follow the crowd than take a risk themselves and be trail blazers.
All that being said now that ProtonDB exists and Valve is actively radically improving support via Proton, that gamers see in the wild SteamDecks popping up literally around them, in flights, airports, waiting rooms, etc they just can not ignore the fact that support is improving enough to have fun. Mentality will change but it takes time and Microsoft is fighting back because despite having Azure as their dollar printing asset, they are just hooked on bundling.
But is it justified? I can’t think of a single new release PC game (without anti-cheat. I don’t play multiplayer online games really) that hasn’t worked on Linux with, at most, very little tinkering.
I don’t actually know BUT it would be amazing to start with a ranking, e.g. https://www.npr.org/2024/07/16/g-s1-9554/best-games-2024-picked-by-npr-staff , and see if 100% of those via e.g. ProtonDB API or even manually (but not ideal to stay up to date), are above a quality threshold, say Gold or Platinum (or obviously native) then tell everyone about it.
Because… if it’s true that 100% of those (anti-cheat excluded) do work then even I, a gamer who runs exclusively Linux on PC and handeld, would be assuming maybe 80%.