- cross-posted to:
- gaming@lemmy.zip
- cross-posted to:
- gaming@lemmy.zip
This update, among other things, adds support for VK_EXT_descriptor_heap, which should bring significant performance boost to Nvidia cards, once it’s properly implemented.
How can anyone get excited over GPUs in 2026?
Like, what are you looking forward to at this point? Just enjoy what you have…
I don’t want exciting I want stable.
Yeah no I want exciting too.
I would recommend not installing beta drivers in that case.
I’d recommend avoiding NVidia in general. Their drivers are intensely hit or miss. Any time anything has gone wrong with my PC, NVidia and their shitty drivers have been the culprit.
Any time anything has gone wrong with my PC, NVidia and their shitty drivers have been the culprit.
This seems unlikely. You’ve never had a hard drive failure, bad RAM, missing dependencies, malware or bugs in any other software except NVIDIA?
You must be one heck of a statistical outlier.
In the past two years? Nope, entirely NVidia. There’s been a bunch of problems, absolutely, but it’s always been NVidia’s garbage drivers at the core of it.
In the past two years? Nope, entirely NVidia.

2 years without a non-video card related problem? I don’t think I go 2 weeks without some issue or another (Arch life).
I’ve gone 4 years on my Ubuntu laptop (DELL XPS-13) without any serious problems.
My one year old Lenovo Gaming laptop with an NVIDIA chip, however… Audio randomly stops working and I have to kick-start ALSA to get it going again - Until it just blows out audio entirely and I have to reboot. My only work-around is to use bluetooth audio.
So yeah, NVIDIA has some responsibility here. I don’t have any other problems on the Lenovo (also Ubuntu) either. That said, I’ve had few problems with GenAI or Steam video games like Cyberpunk 2077 on NVIDIA (other than audio), so it isn’t all bad.
Literally haven’t had a single problem on arch that was due to arch in like 6 years.
Nvidia has caused more issues then arch has.
Literally haven’t had a single problem on arch that was due to arch in like 6 years.
Are you guys LLMs? This is English but it doesn’t seem to have any correlation to actual reality.
How? I’m running Tumbleweed on my desktop which is supposedly more stable than Arch, but I’ve had no problems with Arch on my laptop. Granted I’ve only had that for four months or so.
I don’t buy hardware from companies that are hostile to open source.
Well, they seem to be loosening up on that.
Already moved to AMD.
Lol, let me know when they add back support for GTX 1000 series cards. XD
Amen to that brother 🙏
My 1070 ti is chugging on strong 🤟😎
I built a new machine with a free 1070-ti in it like a month ago, was a big upgrade for me.
Wow an expectation of future vague performance improvements is exciting indeed!
Vulkan developers said last year that this is the single biggest bottleneck on Nvidia cards that they are aware of. Of course, the final performance improvement can only be known once it is properly implemented, but their guestimation is that it should bring the performance much closer to Windows performance.
I already get better frame rates on Linux than I did on Windows. But I won’t complain about more of them
Is… is it as exciting as their most recent Windows driver?
Has anyone been able to get HDR working in Kubuntu 25.10 without the system crashing entirely?
It currently works for me on Ubuntu with Gnome and current drivers, so it’s not (just) NVidia. I do notice HDR mode is slightly more dim on my screen though, so I turned it off. It’ll be nice to see improvements.
Have you tried moving to a newer kernel? It should be working with Nvidia latest and KDE latest (Mine is solid on CachyOS) so it could be a kernel bug for you. No real downside to installing a newer one; but depending on your setup there could be a few regressions that might force you back to stable.
No real downside to installing a newer one; but depending on your setup there could be a few regressions that might force you back to stable.
So there are no real downsides except for potentially that it won’t work and will waste a whole bunch of time and you’ll have to revert.
Yep. No downsides.
That’s literally how any update on a computer ever will work. Real downsides worth mentioning would be like “you’ll be unbootable, you can’t rollback, it’ll update a bunch of other packages, it might delete user home”. Having to select an old entry in your grub config at boot because the new kernel doesn’t play nice with any number of custom peripherals or packages on your system is not what I would consider a serious downside and you’d have to do it if Kubuntu decided to roll a kernel update anyway. Do you uh, use linux?
HDR improvements are coming in some later driver version.
https://forums.developer.nvidia.com/t/vulkan-extensions-needed-for-hdr-is-missing/334268/14?u=tda0626No one should buy a product on a promise of future functionality. The answer is a clear “no” as of now.
I agree on that, but Nvidia GPU are by far the most common GPUs among gamers. Some of them might be excited to hear that their HDR woes are getting fixed at some point, possibly in near-ish future. Some people in that forum thread are saying that the HDR extensions are actually already included in the driver, even though the Nvidia guy said otherwise.
So the answer is shrug with a side of “thoughts and prayers!”
KDE on endeavouros works with HDR for me (latest drivers). Ubuntu is usually a few months behind on updates, but I wouldn’t expect plasma 6 to crash every time when trying HDR. I hope you’re able to narrow down the cause, or have a magical update that fixes it.
It’s not just Plasma I think. I can’t even ctrl-alt-fkey into a terminal. The whole system freezes.
Not upgrading. The last two on Windows apparently had lots of bugs
exciting one? like full of bugs and crashing constantly?








