• @Fizz@lemmy.nz
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          144 months ago

          Yes but people seem to really want a SteamOS like experience on their desktop. Thats what Bazzite provides.

          I dont think steamOS is a good desktop experience but if that makes people feel safe enough to try linux then I think Bazzite does a 100x better job than SteamOS.

          If they want an actual desktop that can game and do everyything then they should try Fedora with KDE.

            • @Fizz@lemmy.nz
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              54 months ago

              Endeavour is great as well. I’ve heard nothing but good things about it.

              • @mudmaniac@lemmy.world
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                44 months ago

                Linux Mint hides and automates a little too much for my liking. Arch should be within my skill lvl but most days I don’t want to be tuning the suspension while the vehicle is moving. Endeavour seem the right cup of tea for someone who has grown up using DOS and terminals and still retains the ability to touch type at 50wpm.

        • @hobbsc@lemmy.sdf.org
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          74 months ago

          I’m a daily driver of Bazzite and Bluefin. I felt this way initially but it’s been generally painless. I typically check flatpak -> app image -> homebrew -> distrobox when I need something. If that fails, I use rpm-ostree and reboot.

          I work in development/devops/infosec by trade and to date there hasn’t been a single package or program that I needed that I couldn’t get running with minimal fuss. I’ve even run a couple of MDM packages that my work requires.

          • @tehmics@lemmy.world
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            84 months ago

            I’m not shy about Linux but my eyes glazed over reading that flow chart. Don’t pretend this is okay for typical users switching from Windows

            • @Fizz@lemmy.nz
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              94 months ago

              if you need specific drivers that arent in a generic kernel you’re already out of everyday user territory even on a normal distro.

            • chingadera
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              That’s why we got dem tar and dnf

              And also that’s just not true. There’s also Space Cadet Pinball

                • chingadera
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                  4 months ago

                  No, on bazzite because it’s a fedora distro

                  Edit: wasn’t trying to to come off as a dick, reread it and I could see it taken that way

                  Also I’m relatively new to Linux, so I’m sure with some things that may not be true, but 100% of what I’ve had to do has been either within discover, or I’ve followed pages on fedora to find out and it’s worked Everytime. Whatever bazzite installation you have whether it’s 38/39 etc, those line up with fedora versions as far as I’m aware.

                  It’s been solid for me. It’s the same or less amount of troubleshooting I’d have to do on windows, and I’m familiar with windows. Making windows work is my job. That coupled with the absolute mess that is windows support pages, bazzite has been good for me. Arch was pretty cool too, not nearly as bad as people said it was going to be, I just had an issue with audio I couldn’t figure out. I just wanted a works right now solution, and that’s what it’s been.

        • JustEnoughDucks
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          I can attest to this. I daily drive bazzite exclusively now.

          Rocket league specifically only uses 40% of the GPU and 25% CPU and refuses to use any more at all. It is only a bazzite problem. Other distros are completely fine and other bazzite users have reported the same thing, regardless of settings, launch options, etc…

          It is hell when trying to do embedded firmware development. Pretty much everything has to be done through distrobox related to it because JLink needs to be accessible by NRF connect which has to be accessible by VSCode, etc… vscode and oss versions simply don’t work if you have to install more than the very basic UI extensions.

          Plus then you have udev rules that you have to manually place in the read only file system (recommended by a Bazzite maintainer on their discord) which they explicitly tell you never to do in the docs. There is absolutely nothing regarding JLink (the most widely used industry flashing tool for ARM) in any universalblue docs, even the bluefin and aurora versions “for developers”.

          Also, there is absolutely no known way to handle eID credentials, crypto keys, etc in order to digitally sign documents. Also key management and access simply does not work at all in flatpak.

          Network scanning simply doesn’t work at all (yes, saned is set up). It is completely nonfunctional, it can’t discover anything.

          Outside of those cases though, it works fine. Themes work, font installation works as expected: the firewall, KiCAD, freeCAD work, browsers, media players, etc… All work fine. Distrobox, while start menu applications via distrobox sometimes simply don’t start, they often work fine. However, I haven’t had to worry about updating my system in 4 months because updates are in the background and completely seamless and not a single thing breaks during updates which by itself is the reason I switched from arch.

          (Arch never became unbootable or seriously broken in 8 years, but I would have update problems and have to search for forum solutions to make a full update work every month or two)

          • @Infernal_pizza@lemmy.world
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            14 months ago

            Why are you still using it if you’re having this many issues? Is it just because you don’t want to go through the hassle of a reinstall at the moment or are there features that you don’t want to go without?

            • JustEnoughDucks
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              I’ll be honest. It was a hell of a time getting things working correctly due to the lack of documentation, but now I have everything except scanning and document signing working which I rarely use anyway. (Rocket league runs fine, just with half the fps I should be getting) I literally don’t have to touch anything anymore, it will just keep itself updated and working completely hands-off. That is what I want out of a system now that tweaking and debugging is a distraction from my other hobbies rather than a hobby itself.

              The biggest feature that I like is Linux without having any manual update intervention at all. It all just runs and updates itself and works.

              If something goes wrong in my software, I can uninstall and reinstall the flatpak delete remaining files, and reinstall with 3 clicks instead of having to search for where the hell this specific program decided to stash its files and configs and cache on my system like I had to with a traditional system. It takes the recurring annoyances out and trades them with 1-time annoyances.

        • fmstrat
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          I’m with you. Love Bazzite in the living room, but no way would it be my daily driver.

      • circuitfarmer
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        34 months ago

        Or literally any other distro.

        Pop is probably much easier to be up and running vs. Bazzite.

    • missingno
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      154 months ago

      What’s keeping you from using a distro that’s already designed for desktop use?

        • chingadera
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          114 months ago

          Successfully, many times, it’s extremely rare that I have to actually talk with someone directly because so much has already been accurately documented.

          I work with windows and those forums don’t do shit

          • @mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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            I work with windows and those forums don’t do shit

            I’ve gotten to the point that every time I’m directed to Microsoft Help I automatically downvote whatever the MS rep posts, because it will never not be garbage

            • chingadera
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              They just keep saying shit like “what version are you on?” Motherfucker, the latest, and honestly, we know there isn’t a version where you fixed this problem thousands have been trying to solve for months and in a lot of cases years.

              Idk how accurate this is, my boss had mentioned it, but apparently they’ve outsourced that shit to a third party, and they just keep opening tickets and solving them and keep asking you simple shit so they can bill per ticket solved. It’s a godamn mess. I’m just hoping Linux catches on enough to enter the corporate world at the user level.

              We’re at a point where when something breaks, usually a Linux update fixes it, and it’s windows equivalent just keeps further breaking itself.

              • @orange@communick.news
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                24 months ago

                From what I’ve heard at work and from others, MS uses version queries to stall tickets because they constantly release updates that they can point to and say “you need to update before we can help”.

        • circuitfarmer
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          24 months ago

          It used to be bad. In the last few years, it isn’t. We want other people to use Linux now.

    • Cethin
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      94 months ago

      Dude, you don’t need SteamOS for a desktop. Just download a more widely used desktop distro. I use Garuda, and it’s great for starting up gaming.

      SteamOS will be great for a console-like experience out of the box, which is not what you want for desktop.

      • @LandedGentry@lemmy.zip
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        44 months ago

        That is exactly why many of us want it. We know what we’re asking for. And yes we know bazzite exists.

      • @dyc3@lemmy.world
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        144 months ago

        No, it’s based on arch. There’s a bunch of polish on top of it that makes it more stable and such

      • @x00z@lemmy.world
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        54 months ago

        Yeah I don’t see any need for desktop use, except for making a Steam console under your TV.

        You can use Steam with Proton on whatever distro you want.

      • Cethin
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        14 months ago

        It’s built on top of Arch. The distro I’m using is Garuda, which is also built on Arch, and there’s a gaming version that includes everything you need to play games immediately. No one should use SteamOS probably for a desktop. They should use something like Garuda. SteamOS is for a console-like experience.

    • HeyListenWatchOut
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      54 months ago

      I really want to switch my main desktop to Linux, but use it for remote work too, so I have MS Teams… is there a way to reliably virtualize it?

    • @Case@lemmynsfw.com
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      24 months ago

      I’m on W11 with my daily driver.

      I don’t like it. I didn’t like it from the start.

      So why?

      Because W10 will hit EOL sooner than later; and I have to support that shit professionally.

      Doesn’t matter that no one is testing or building applications for W11, no security patches mean any employer worth their salt will switch over to W11, despite not having the infrastructure to do it.

      Admin VS IT. I’m nearly 40, and that story is older than I am.

      • Nexy
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        124 months ago

        I already jumped to linux and I abandoned adobe as a graphic designer. I feel so free now. The tool don’t make the profesional.

      • @Fizz@lemmy.nz
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        64 months ago

        No this is a super out of date version that was not designed for general desktop use. It is specifically designed for the steam machine which was a failure. Value really needs to take this page down so people arent downloading a 9 year old version of linux.

        • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 🏆
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          Well good news: They’ve also recently announced that they’re going to be updating it to be the same as what’s on the Deck. THough we probably won’t see an actual release until either just before or just after the new version of the deck is officially announced/released.

          Also: The failure of the Steam Machine had little to do with the operating system and more to do with the fact there was not one singular “Steam Machine.” It was any number of prebuilt PCs with extra stupid steps. TO say it wasn’t meant for general desktop use is bullshit; a Steam Machine was nothing more than a desktop PC running this OS.

          • @Fizz@lemmy.nz
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            24 months ago

            At the time of the steam machine wine was not in a good state (from what i’ve heard, I wasnt a linux user at the time) and gaming relied on Valve getting devs to port things to SteamOS 2.

            • @Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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              24 months ago

              Wine was in a great state, it just wasn’t integrated on Steam so it was clunky to get it working. Long story short Steam Machines only had a handful of games available (those with native binaries) unless you jumped through hoops to install steam on wine and launch steam from steam or something of the sort.

              At the time we thought that the steam machines would make devs port their games, but that didn’t happen, so Valve invested heavily on Wine to make the games come to Linux regardless of the game devs. If Valve hadn’t invested most games that run today would still run, wine has always been an amazing piece of technology, their investment was mostly on a library called dxvk which translates directX calls to Vulkan instead of OpenGL, for technical reasons this was needed for any game that only supports DX12, but also gave some performance boost to other titles. I’m not trying to downplay Valve’s hand, dxvk was a much needed piece of the puzzle that Valve singlehandedly financed, not to mention all of the other stuff they’ve done that benefitted Linux gamers over the years, but if they had integrated wine on Steam without dxvk 99% of cases would be mostly the same (but that 1% are heavy hitters).

    • @Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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      -54 months ago

      Don’t use SteamOS as a desktop OS, that’s not what it’s meant to. You might be used to Windows and think that a different distribution of Linux is just a different customization of the OS, but it’s almost an entirely different OS that happens to run the same binaries.

      If you’re interested in getting an alternative to Windows, try some beginner friendly Linux distros on a Virtual Machine or an old laptop. I recommend Linux Mint to newcomers, but if you’re used to the desktop mode on SteamOS maybe Kubuntu. The closest you can get is Bazzite but that’s also not a desktop OS so I wouldn’t use that unless it was for a Steam Machine. The second closest (that’s also somewhat beginner friendly) is Manjaro K DE version, but being Arch based I don’t tend to recommend it to new Linux users, but of you’re dead set on getting something as close as possible to SteamOS that’s it.

        • @Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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          -34 months ago

          Cool, so did I a while back, what’s your point? It’s still not a great replacement for Windows as it’s not the intended use of the OS, and will be frustrating for someone without Linux experience.

          • @LandedGentry@lemmy.zip
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            I don’t want a replacement for windows and steam OS is about as intuitive as Linux gets. If it’s too complicated for someone they probably shouldn’t be using Linux.

            Some of us legitimately want to build a gaming PC around steamOS. Stop telling us what we do or don’t want. Stop treating people like they’re tech illiterate because they’re not doing what you would do. I have 3 different distros on 3 different machines running right now - I know what I want and i know what steamOS can/can’t do. You do you.

            SteamOS even now is a decently capable desktop OS. If you want more than gaming as the central focus then sure look elsewhere. But you’re just being obnoxious and condescending about it.

            • @Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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              04 months ago

              If you want more than gaming as the central focus then sure look elsewhere.

              That’s exactly my point, OP talked about replacing Win 10 desktop, not about a gaming machine (for which I agree SteamOS is an excellent choice).

              • @LandedGentry@lemmy.zip
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                They just said desktop use. Not a wholesale windows replacement. You can’t use current steamOS as a desktop outside of a steamdeck.

      • @agelord@lemmy.world
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        44 months ago

        it’s almost an entirely different OS that happens to run the same binaries

        What?

        As far as I know, it’s literally just an immutable build of Arch Linux.

        • @Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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          24 months ago

          Yes, for you and me who understand what that means it’s just the same, but for someone with no Linux experience is going to be very different. Googling any issue he has will direct him to alter config files or install packages, neither of which would be permanent on SteamOS, while the OS is the same the usage of it is completely different, so for a person with no Linux experience to try to use it as their daily desktop system it would be frustrating because none of the help online would apply to him.

  • missingno
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    444 months ago

    I’m still holding onto the dream that we’ll get SteamOS onto something small enough to fit in my pocket and run all my favorite 2D indie games. First manufacturer to do it gets all my money.

    I bought a Miyoo Mini Plus a while back, purely an impulse buy for how cheap it was on sale, and ended up putting far more time into it than I ever did with my deck. This is the cozy form factor I need.

    • Snot Flickerman
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      444 months ago

      I’ma be real: It fucking kills me that Steam on Android has been mostly used for 2FA and the idea of it being an alternate game store for Android somehow just… doesn’t exist?

      Especially, out of all companies to take the fight about that kind of stuff to Apple and Google, Valve has the punching power, and they’ve literally already had Epic forge a path for them in this regard.

      Why is my Android copy of Balatro unable to use the same cloud save system as Steam? Why am I stuck in Google’s fucking lame gaming ecosystem? It just makes me heave and sigh because I’d way rather be purchasing games for Android via Steam on the Steam Android app. It just feels like such a missed opportunity.

    • @TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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      104 months ago

      I wonder if Valve plans to release an Arm version of SteamOS. They’d have to for it to ever show up on a device like the Miyoo Mini Plus, which uses an Arm based CPU, instead of the x86 based CPU in the Steam Deck, and other Windows handhelds.

      Right now I think the OS of choice for Arm based devices is Android, which works well enough, but I don’t think very many PC games are ported to Android.

    • Chainweasel
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      84 months ago

      I would kill for something like the Miyoo Mini in a GBA form factor.
      I get that there’s a lot of nostalgia for the Gameboy / Gameboy color layout but the GBA/SD layout is definitely more ergonomically friendly.

      • Kraiden
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        94 months ago

        Anbernic rg34xx?

        I have an rg35xx h (just a generic square thing) and I’m pretty happy with it. I play mostly GBA and some PSP games on it

      • Drasglaf
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        Anbernic recently released the RG 34XX. It doesn’t have SteamOS, but it’s still Linux.

      • XNX
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        34 months ago

        The miyoo flip is a GBA SP form factor and it’s more powerful. It can run n64 and Dreamcast games

      • missingno
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        14 months ago

        There are dozens of similar products in just about any form factor you’d like, including ones explicitly themed after classic handhelds.

        None of them run SteamOS yet though, they’re all either Android or a customized lightweight ARM Linux running Retroarch.

    • @warmaster@lemmy.world
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      64 months ago

      The GPD WIN 2 fits perfectly in a pocket, I hope the new one keeps those dimensions since it’s already confirmed that it will be Steam OS compatible.

      • @ampersandrew@lemmy.world
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        I had the Win 2. You needed fairly large pockets, and I wouldn’t really trust its build quality there anyway.

        • @warmaster@lemmy.world
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          14 months ago

          Yeah, not exactly for skinny jeans, but you don’t need cargo pants sized pockets either. The Win 2 quality was a complete disaster.

    • mesa
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      24 months ago

      The flip has some great ports apparently. Balatro being one of them. I’m hoping for the same as you. I want a steam Gameboy like.

    • darreninthenet
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      24 months ago

      Hadn’t come across the Miyoo before so went to have a look… looks like a really good little product but wow what an annoying website constantly popping up the chat box over the whole mobile screen whilst browsing!

      Anyway, how have you found it ?

    • makyo
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      14 months ago

      I love my Steam Deck but it’d be an i stant purchase if they released a Steam Deck lite with half the size and the same capability

  • MobileDecay
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    -624 months ago

    That’s great if you don’t care about playing online games and are okay with games you buy becoming incompatible.

    • @atrielienz@lemmy.world
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      324 months ago

      Said the person who did no research has no idea what they’re talking about. Steam OS has been pushing game devs and publishers to be more compatible with Linux, not less. Additionally, the only online games that really have problems with steam OS are ones that require kernel level anti-cheat, and we all should be pushing for the downfall of that. It isn’t necessary.

      • MobileDecay
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        -354 months ago

        And so Cod works now? Yeah, that’s not a thing. Does Paladins work? Oh, yeah crap. Was GTA V online compatibility killed? It was? Oh, damn. Does Destiny 2 work? Oh, you mean the developers threatened people with bans if they tried to play the game on Linux? Oh, oh crap. How is VR going on Linux? Not well.Oh, damn. 🤔

        • JelleWho
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          184 months ago

          I do VR on linux, I don’t see the problem? And of the about 500 games I own, there is only a handful that doesn’t work on Linux. And most of those are specificly designed by the creator to not work.

          Valve has been doing an absolutely awesome job with the compatibility layer and making it easier for devs to port natively to Linux.

          • @ludicolo@lemmy.ml
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            24 months ago

            What is your daily driver headset for linux on vr?

            Been trying to setup wivrn/alvr on quest 3 and I am losing my mind lol. Thinking aboutt just going back to my rift and using openhmd.

            • JelleWho
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              24 months ago

              Valve Index, basically worked out of the box for me (Nobara)

          • MobileDecay
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            -134 months ago

            VR on Linux is a pain in the ass to set up and while Valve has done a great job you still can’t rust that all your games will work. Linux is amazing for web browsing, document editing, and retro gaming. Especially if you don’t wanna deal with Microsoft but it’s average for modern gaming. It’s still not there yet.

            • @ludicolo@lemmy.ml
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              Bro do some research before you come in making outrageous statements.

              There are absolutely a wide variety of plug-n-play headsets that just work. Take the valve index for example. I have heard that headset works just fine out of the box. Same with any steamvr relient headset if I am not mistaken.

              When you use a headset that depends on third party software that’s when a little more setup is required. However we still have options that won’t be a massive headache.

              Like the cv1 for example, you can use something like openhmd and use your cv1 just fine on steamvr.

              And that’s also not to say that something like a quest 2/3 isn’t hard either. Alvr is easy to install it’s just about tweaking proper settings for your network. Which you may alrwady need to do if you’ve used virtual desktop.

              Then there is wivrn. But you get my point.

              Linux is more than gaming ready. Ever heard of protondb? Maybe give it a look. If an online game doesn’t work that is of fault of the dev/publisher not making the anticheat compatible. Valve has consistently worked with anti-cheat devs like battle eye and easy anti-cheat to make it easy on the dev side to make their anti-cheat version support proton. Yet somehow we have large companies like rockstar not putting in that simple effort.

              https://www.engadget.com/arma-3-dayz-proton-battleye-support-224625719.html?guccounter=1

              https://www.theverge.com/2024/9/18/24248585/gta-v-steam-deck-battleye

              Please stop spreading misinformation. It harms the absolute mountainload of work put in by people who have gotten linux to be where it is now. Get mad and point blame at your game devs/publishers for being so uncooperative.

        • @Denjin@lemmings.world
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          64 months ago

          COD , GTA and Destiny 2 compatability was killed by the developers, not by Linux. VR (ignoring that it’s a gimmick which is going to die soon enough) works fine.

          • MobileDecay
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            -124 months ago

            They don’t work on Linux. No matter who or what you want to blame. Also, yes VR works if you go crazy trying to get it to work.