this post was submitted on 26 Oct 2023
741 points (95.7% liked)

Linux Gaming

15518 readers
251 users here now

Discussions and news about gaming on the GNU/Linux family of operating systems (including the Steam Deck). Potentially a $HOME away from home for disgruntled /r/linux_gaming denizens of the redditarian demesne.

This page can be subscribed to via RSS.

Original /r/linux_gaming pengwing by uoou.

Resources

WWW:

Discord:

IRC:

Matrix:

Telegram:

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

And if your only use case is gaming, you should use Windows because that's the platform game developers target. Linux will behave differently (sometimes better, sometimes worse), and you're unlikely to get support if there's a Linux-specific issue, and multiplayer gaming still isn't great on Linux due to anticheat either not working on Linux or anti-cheat flagging Linux users on accident.

That being said, if gaming was truly the only thing I used a computer for, I'd switch to console gaming. The experience is usually smoother since devs only need to target a handful of hardware configurations.

However, if gaming is secondary to the main purpose of the computer, Linux is a great option if it fits your workflow. It fits mine and I've been Linux-only for ~15 years now (I keep a Windows install for testing stuff, not gaming), and I actually switched to Linux knowing that gaming wasn't really going to be a thing (I played a handful of games, like Minecraft and Factorio, but mostly used it for school+work).

I think Linux is great, but don't switch just because of some benchmarks, switch because it fits with your overall computer use cases.