• Deello@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      I’ve uninstalled it dozens of times. Uninstalling Windows is the real tip.

      But gaming…

      • c10l@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        2 years since I’ve built my gaming rig. I’ve booted Windows on it once, and at this point I don’t even have a Windows partition anymore.

        • FMT99@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          I’m someone that happily advocates Linux for daily use but for gaming… Some games run great on Linux Steam but there are more than a few that either won’t run at all or for some reason (gpu drivers maybe?) run slow as hell when on Windows they run just fine. I 100% prefer to run on Linux but until there’s a solution for that I’m stuck dual booting.

          • c10l@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            The games I play on my hardware tend to perform the same or a little better on Linux.

            I’m not saying this is true generally but it is for my relatively small sample.

            For reference, I have a recent Radeon GPU. Games like Cyberpunk 2077, Baldur’s Gate 3 and even Starfield (which I haven’t played in a while because 🥱) all fit this experience.

            The open source driver for Nvidia seems to be catching up lately, so hopefully everyone will soon have a prime time on Linux!

            • Chee_Koala@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              Anecdotal: first game I really felt a difference in a bad way (it was worse on linux), was with battlebit Remastered… it’s still very playable but I had weird frame drops on the same hardware. Normally it’s the same or better though, so whatever :-)

        • accideath@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          I’m currently in the process of (finally) migrating my gaming PC to Linux and through that eradicating the last bit of Windows in my private life.

          However, I happen to have a Nvidia card in my PC (GTX 1650 was the only sensible choice since I’m limited to a 250W PSU and it was almost half the price of an RX 6400) and Linux (nobara in my case) isn’t exactly making it easy for me, especially since I’d like to have gamescope / the steam deck interface.

          • Chee_Koala@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            I made steam start in Big picture mode on my linux mint HTPC to achieve that interface. Does that not work for you bc of the Nvidia card?

            • accideath@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              The regular old af Big Picture mode should work fine but it’s ugly and clunky imo. The new steamdeck specific big picture mode (or rather session) doesn’t work. I just get a black screen. That might be fixable but I haven’t dug into that yet. It should be able to work with current drivers. Wouldn’t be as complicated with AMD graphics and I’m looking if I find someone to trade my 1650 with an RX 6400…

              • c10l@lemmy.world
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                9 months ago

                Yeah I don’t think that’s gonna work. It uses Wayland which AFAIK is not supported by the proprietary Nvidia driver. No idea about the open source one but I don’t think that’s ready for prime time yet anyway.

                • accideath@lemmy.world
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                  9 months ago

                  I have read that it does work (if you’re lucky, using the right drivers, sacrifice your firstborn,…) And in all fairness, nobara linux did get Wayland to work on my NVIDIA card but not gamescope. I‘m still getting a black screen

      • NOPper@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        I’m a pretty heavy PC gamer. I’ve been full time Linux for a decade and it’s never been better for it. There’s like two games my friends play that won’t run due to anticheat, but lucky for me I don’t play those anyway. 🤷‍♂️

        • Thorry84@feddit.nl
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          9 months ago

          If you’re using Office365 it tends to auto update and happily forget you don’t want to have OneDrive on your machine, so it reinstalls it.

          It kinda annoying because OneDrive is a piece of shit in general, but saving directly to SharePoint from Office apps is useful. As with many Microsoft services, OneDrive is just SharePoint in disguise. But I really would like the SharePoint bit without the OneDrive bit.

          I also don’t like the whole cloud first thing, pushing everything to Microsoft services. But I understand why they did it, for regular dumb users storing shit on a cloud service is probably better than on the computer. I’ve had multiple co-workers send me Word docs with a list of linked documents (why is this a feature and why do people use it?), which all linked to the local Documents folder. They said they checked all the links before mailing the Word docs, so it must be me who is mistaken.