Perhaps including what kinds of hardware work best with them. I’m interested in people’s opinions on this.

    • vivivoxOP
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      3 years ago

      Highest performance, easiest set up, most versatile with proprietary hardware I suppose are my personal criteria for this question.

  • OsrsNeedsF2P
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    3 years ago

    Which distros have the most hardware support?

    • Almost all firmware is baked into the kernel, so any distro with a modern kernel
    • Avoid:
      • Debian, Slackware
    • Use
      • Anything with a modern kernel
      • Linux Mint (has extra driver support)
      • Pop_OS (has extra driver support)
    • Pro Tip
      • When doing your Linux install, select non-free firmware
      • This doesn’t mean you have to pay for the firmware, it just means it’s not free & open source

    Ultimately, they’re all the same. If you want to play games and have an easy life, ask these questions:

    • How do I want to install software? (This is “what distro”)
    • How do I want my desktop to look? (This is “what desktop environment (DE)”)
    • blank_sl8
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      3 years ago

      You only need to “Avoid” Debian if you are a real beginner. Adding the non-free repo and installing firmware from there requires adding just a couple lines to sources.list then installing certain packages.

  • onlooker
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    3 years ago

    Solid recommendations in this thread. I’d just like to add that if you’re using an nVidia card and are considering KDE as your desktop, some additional elbow grease might be required [1], [2].

    This is just personal experience mind you, but my nVidia card never seemed to play well with KDE. Cinnamon, XFCE or Budgie on the other hand? No problems.

  • GadgeteerZA
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    3 years ago

    Yes probably not about the distro itself as it merely depends on what software and drivers you are running.

    But what is working well for me currently for 99% of the 80+ games I’ve bought on Steam Games is:

    • Manjaro KDE running on AMD CPU with Nvidia card using Nvidia driver.
    • Steam Games with the Proton GE drivers.
    • Recognising my Logitech G29 racing wheel, pedals, and gear shift.

    I just notice that if changing the Proton driver version, it can be worth deleting the compatdata folder created by the previous version, if you have problems. And it works best with games installed in the Steam folders on EXT4 drive. Installing to a NTFS shared drive is sometimes problematic for some games.

      • GadgeteerZA
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        3 years ago

        The problem I have had with Proton GE, is that some updates (two for me so far) had broken my racing wheel support. Took quite a bit of messing around before I tried reverting to a previous version, and then all worked again. So yes, for Proton GE I stay on an existing version, and only move to a newer version if I have some new game, and it does not run on the Proton GE version I’m using.

  • Halce
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    3 years ago

    Garuda Linux Gaming (based on Arch, baked-in Steam… etc.

  • zenobit
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    3 years ago

    Using and recomending void linux. its very easy to manage. runit instead of systemd. rolling release, but very stable (didnt get any issues with updates during years) posible partial upgrades. low on resources capable of anything. package manager very quick and full featerured. xbps-src alternative to aur.

    I am using it on two computers. -ryzen 5 with gtx 1050 -thinkpad t420 And one i installed to my mother she never have any complains…

    And for better handling services and packages i recommend bpytop, vpm and vsv

    Lutris and steam are in repos so…