Experience: I have a bit of experience with Linux. I started around 2008, distro-hopped weekly, decided on Debian until around 2011, when I switched to Windows as I started getting interested in gaming. Tried switching back around 2015, this time using Arch Linux for about a month, but had some bad experiences with gaming and switched back to Windows. I have had a Debian and Arch VM in Virtual Box since then for testing different applications and a more coherent environment to work with servers.

Understanding: Which brings me to now, I am really interested in using Linux for gaming, I know there is Proton from Valve and that they have been really pushing Linux gaming forward with it.

Thoughts: I have been contemplating dual booting by installing Debian to an SSD and simply using the UEFI boot menu to choose instead of having to install to the EFI of Windows.

I guess, I should just do it, as it won’t affect my Windows installation, and I could test different games and if all works well, move over. This would also allow me to try different distributions, though my heart is for Debian, I even like Debian Unstable.

Note: I am sorry for the wall of text, I am just kind of anxious I guess.

  • CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    There’s never a bad time to switch to Linux! The best time may have already passed, but the second best time is now!

  • hallettj@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I believe your last Linux experience in 2015 predates DXVK which has been transformative for Linux gaming. Wine used to have to implement its own DirectX replacement which necessarily lagged behind Microsoft’s implementation, and IIUC didn’t get the same level of hardware acceleration due to missing out on DirectX acceleration built into graphics cards.

    Now DXVK acts as a compatibility bridge between DirectX and Vulkan. Vulkan is cross-platform, does generally the same stuff that DirectX does, and graphics cards have hardware acceleration for Vulkan calls the same way they do for DirectX calls. So game performance on Linux typically meets or exceeds performance on Windows, and you can play games using the latest DirectX version without waiting for some poor dev to reimplement it.

    If you are using Steam with Proton, Lutris, or really any Wine gaming these days you are using DXVK. It’s easy to take for granted. But I remember the night-and-day difference it made.

  • Zaphodquixote@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Once you get it set up, all the anxiety goes away.

    Back your shit up, and do it. Games that can’t be played on Linux at all are decreasing. A dual boot setup solves that problem entirely.

    Yeah, proton can take a bit to get set up and running, but there’s plenty of help for it out there with a search. And, again, you’ll still have the dual boot option. Linux really does cut down on the bullshit.

    • Julian@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      On steam it’s basically just a toggle. Maybe setting the proton version in the game’s properties. For non steam games, launchers like heroic can even detect and use the proton versions you installed through steam, so you don’t ever need to really do any setup yourself.

      • AspieEgg@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 year ago

        Since that’s going to depend a lot on your own personal Steam library, you can check what works well on Proton with this site. https://www.protondb.com/

        You can even enter your Steam Profile link in there and it will show you the ratings of the games you own. Of the 155 I own, 86% had a gold, platinum or native rating.

          • AspieEgg@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            1 year ago

            I had very few that actually failed to run, most of the rest is silver with a few bronze.

            Native means the game was built to run on Linux without Proton.
            Platinum works perfectly with no tweaks.
            Gold works great, but may require some tweaks to work best.
            Silver runs with minor issues but is playable.
            Bronze runs but may crash or have issues preventing comfortable play.
            Borked is unplayable.

            I drew the line between silver and gold. If I moved it down one spot to between bronze and silver, almost everything I own would run. I think this is fantastic. This is literally running games that weren’t designed to run on Linux at all, and almost all of them run perfectly.

            • 30isthenew29@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              But is it easier than before? A few years ago I had to set up every game in playonlinux first. Not that big of a deal, but I just want every game to work out of the box like Windows, not set up every game first.

              • AspieEgg@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                1 year ago

                Yeah. You just install them with Steam and play. The Steam client comes with Proton which runs Windows games on Linux.

                For the games that require tweaks, someone on ProtonDB will have said what tweaks is needed to play it. It’s generally just adding one small command to the game properties in Steam.

              • Nithanim@programming.dev
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                1 year ago

                If the game is on steam it is pretty easy. I just install the newest custom proton from glorious eggroll. And before i start a game for the first time is select this instead of the default proton. Then it just works generally. I don’t check protondb anymore, only in case of problems. I can’t even recall a game that doesn’t work currently. Granted, i don’t play AAA, only indie games.

      • Xiaz@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Basically anything that isn’t Siege, Valorant…anything without an abusive anti-cheat

      • Stephen Greenham@mast.solarisfire.com
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        1 year ago

        @mouse @Zaphodquixote I dual boot with Windows 11 and very rarely find myself not using Linux… It plays every game I’ve thrown at it in the last 6 months. The only time I end up using Windows is because I want to use a specific peripheral, like my steering wheel for racing games, rather than because Linux won’t run the game! Lutris is great for non-steam games. Runs Overwatch 2, Diablo IV, Guildwars 2, and League of Legends perfectly for me. GloriousEggroll is worth looking at too 🙂

  • ffhein@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Check https://www.protondb.com/ for the games you play. If some doesn’t work, ask yourself if you can live without them.

    I’ve been full time Linux for quite a few years now, but I do have a dual boot mainly for VR. Other than that there haven’t been many games that I want to play that don’t work with Linux.

    • A Mouse@midwest.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      I’m actually quite excited hearing from everyone, gaming on Linux has changed so much in…oh it’s been 8 years since 2015. I will probably keep one small drive for a minimal Windows installation, just for the few outliers, however looking at ProtonDB shows that most of my games will work just fine or with a small tweak.

  • Julian@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I switched last year and kind of was in a similar spot to you - I had tried to switch in the past but something didn’t work so I went back to windows. But that last attempt has stuck. So I’d just do it. Proton is in an amazing state, old games and even most new singleplayer games will work - some modern multiplayer games with anticheat even work. I’d just check your library on protondb (you can sign in to see your library), see what doesn’t work, if you care about it, or if there are workarounds.

    What I also did is make a list of stuff that doesn’t work and then find alternatives or workarounds. If some games don’t work, you can hold off on switching, check protondb occasionally and see if something changes. But if it’s all good, I’d just make the jump.

    • WackyTabbacy42069@reddthat.com
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      1 year ago

      Anti-Cheat was one of the major things that pushed me back to Windows for gaming. They often aren’t compatible, invalidating the newly proton-compatible game

      • Julian@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Yeah that’s big area that’s shaky with proton. Fortunately a few games have been adding support (halo MCC recently did). And for me, I typically only play singleplayer games - the most modern multiplayer game I play is titanfall 2 which works great on Linux.

        But for someone who does play those games, I can see how the lack of them can be a huge obstacle.

    • A Mouse@midwest.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      I like your idea of making a list. If all goes well I might just move over, and keep Windows on a small disk for any outliers.

      • Julian@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Yeah keeping windows on a separate disk is a good idea. I was going to do too that but I fucked up a dd command and somehow broke the original installation… So I just said fuck it and went full Linux.

      • scutiger@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I believe Protondb has the option to sign in with your Steam account, and show you the status of everything in your library.

  • Haijo@snac.haijo.eu
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    1 year ago

    Proton works very well for me. I don’t play any games that use anti cheat though.
    A lot of games that use anti cheat middleware don’t work, but I’ve heard support is improving.
    I use Debian Testing. I recommend using Testing as well if you want to use Debian, or at least a custom kernel like xanmod to get newer drivers.

  • Jjcool27@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s a great time to game on linux. I my personally use arch and everything works fine for the games I play be it with steam and lutris. I also have an nvidia 3080 and it works fine.

    I recommend pop! Os for your first distro. It’s a very good distro that is newb friendly and it’s ready to go from the first boot.

    It’s a perfect time to get your toes wet and there’s plenty of places to get help when your stuck. The popos subreddit is full of people with the knowledge to help and most important here at lemmy.

  • Stillhart@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    IMHO it depends on what kind of gaming you do. For me, I play all the big tentpole AAA games on console. My PC gaming is mostly indy stuff and things that suck on console like 4x strategy games. For my uses, gaming on linux has been… surprisingly good.

    I would definitely recommend trying it out with dual boot.

  • GustavoM@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Just lower your expectations and dive in. Unless there is a specific game that you REALLY want to play… then search if (your most wanted game) 100% works on linux and then do it.

    All in all, its just a matter of not expecting much and be willing to ditch some things here and there. Get used to “do it yourself” and you’ll be fine.

    • A Mouse@midwest.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      I was suggested to look at ProtonDB, and it looks like all my games will work fine. I will be giving it all a test in the coming days.

      • A Phlaming Phoenix@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        The games that don’t work are typically (not exclusively) games with anti-cheat systems or live service games. Most everything else works out of the box on Steam with Proton.

  • vettnerk@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Might as well. I’m a linux guy, running various distros on a few machines, depending on the machines function. My gaming laptop runs Linux Mint, and I find that to be a pretty good choice. Almost everything works out of the box (I just had to install a newer kernel to make the newest nvidia driver work, as my GPU is pretty new as well).

    I have a Win10 install, but I haven’t used it in ages. Everything I play plays just fine in Linux.

    • 30isthenew29@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Woah…. I really wanna get rid of Windows, the only reason I still used that was for gaming, so if I can get rid of that, that’s great… Windows messed up my boot since an update, so haven’t been on my PC since december now.

  • sLLiK@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Been running Arch exclusively on my gaming rig for 3 months, now, with no issue. Thanks to Proton, the only blocker is games that use anti-cheat solutions that don’t work properly. Everything that’s relied on VAC or EAC work fine, though.

    This is my third attempt at making this move on my gaming rig. The first try was back in 2016. The second was in 2018. This time, I think I’m here to stay. The Steam Deck’s success was the final ingredient.

    • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      The steam deck is almost entirely responsible for my migration to Linux, am in a similar boat to you of having attempted a number of times and written it off as impossible to use for gaming

      Bought a steam deck (and received it a year later lol) and that was what made me want to give it another go. Now I don’t even have windows installed on my PC and boot into it on my laptop maybe once a month to test something for work

  • CaptainJack42@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    If you dual boot on separate drives it should be fine to use grub or systemd boot (or sth else), most Linux bootloaders can detect Windows installations and boot them. On the same drive it is fine as well, but windows tends to overwrite the bootloader with updates (which would be the same even when not booting Windows from the “Linux” bootloader).

    As you said, just do it and try it out. In my experience basically any game runs on Linux these days, with some exceptions, most of them caused by anti cheat (like Fortnite, valorant and some others)

    • A Mouse@midwest.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      That makes sense, thanks for the advice. I don’t play any competitive games, so anti-cheat is a bit less of a problem.

  • Pollux@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    iv moved to linux for over a year now when proton started getting rlly good and iv enjoyed it so much i started a small youtube channel lmao. software has gotten rlly good aswell in the foss universe with package managers like flatpak and some amazing gtk4 apps

    gaming on linux is a breeze and with valve making more deals to get companies to support proton for linux/steamdeck

    its going to continue to get better and better until windows will not be required anymore