How to Game on Linux - Roger Presents Garuda [Swedish with EN subs]
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How to get performance boosts through the newest drivers
aka. How 2 install updates
Which kernel to use
The default one
Its not that hard if you RTFM. And if you dont, you shouldnt use linux in the first place
That's a bit reductive, don't you think?
The beauty of Linux is its wonderful ability to be customized. Maybe Xanmod is a good kernel for you if you play games?
Maybe if you use a desktop environment with Wayland, you'll have less issues with screen sharing in Discord.
It's always nice to hear what other people's experiences are. Depending on the distro, updating drivers can be a bit trickier than noobs might expect since "Driver manager" might not actually have the newest drivers, etc.
Telling people to RTFM is all well and good, but why not share the stuff you've learned with others who are just getting started?
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That's a bit reductive, don't you think?
The beauty of Linux is its wonderful ability to be customized. Maybe Xanmod is a good kernel for you if you play games?
Maybe if you use a desktop environment with Wayland, you'll have less issues with screen sharing in Discord.
It's always nice to hear what other people's experiences are. Depending on the distro, updating drivers can be a bit trickier than noobs might expect since "Driver manager" might not actually have the newest drivers, etc.
Telling people to RTFM is all well and good, but why not share the stuff you've learned with others who are just getting started?
wrote on last edited by [email protected]You are talking about an imaginary Audience
The normal just switched from win guy who looks up youtube videos about how to game on linux knows and cares less about linux than my guinea pig (tho, I think she knows more about linux than me after listening to me try to install gentoo for a week straight, so idk). Telling them to use x kernel, y DE with z Kernel Flags with a changed vim.conf just makes it look like its a hassle to use Linux. If someone wants to learn about linux and go into such details, they will
- Not look up a frickin youtube video since they are the worst place to learn about anything which changes every month or so
- Look up something more akin to „Which linux kernel is best for gaming“
So by making it look like these are basic steps in order to get a game running is counterproductive if only meant well
Its like if you would ask me how to drive a car, and I would go on a 2 hour tangent about synchronising the time the spark plugs fire and replacing the carburator for a more costum design so it sucks out the condensation out of the pipes after shutting off, therefore making corrosion less likely.
Even tho I could have just as well told you to fill up the gas tank at a station and turn the keys, which would have brought me sufficient results anyway
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I don't understand how that explains anything? If they aren't comfortable with English why are they making the title in English?
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Spoken vs written word?
I've forgotten (over the decades) two languages I can still correspond in eg via email, but wouldn't go past ordering food irl.
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Unfortunately it's not that simple.
For the vast majority of games it really is that simple though.
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For the vast majority of games it really is that simple though.
It isn't. Not for a single one.
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It isn't. Not for a single one.
I have been on linux for 5 years and have playing games, and the numer of games that needed ANY configuration I can count on one hand.
If you cant get STEAM games to work on your system, you're doing something wrong.
Most games are just as simple as pressing start.
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You are talking about an imaginary Audience
The normal just switched from win guy who looks up youtube videos about how to game on linux knows and cares less about linux than my guinea pig (tho, I think she knows more about linux than me after listening to me try to install gentoo for a week straight, so idk). Telling them to use x kernel, y DE with z Kernel Flags with a changed vim.conf just makes it look like its a hassle to use Linux. If someone wants to learn about linux and go into such details, they will
- Not look up a frickin youtube video since they are the worst place to learn about anything which changes every month or so
- Look up something more akin to „Which linux kernel is best for gaming“
So by making it look like these are basic steps in order to get a game running is counterproductive if only meant well
Its like if you would ask me how to drive a car, and I would go on a 2 hour tangent about synchronising the time the spark plugs fire and replacing the carburator for a more costum design so it sucks out the condensation out of the pipes after shutting off, therefore making corrosion less likely.
Even tho I could have just as well told you to fill up the gas tank at a station and turn the keys, which would have brought me sufficient results anyway
Aye, alright fair enough.
I won't argue with you.
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I have been on linux for 5 years and have playing games, and the numer of games that needed ANY configuration I can count on one hand.
If you cant get STEAM games to work on your system, you're doing something wrong.
Most games are just as simple as pressing start.
Then you must have forgotten that 5 years ago you had to go into the settings and enable Steam Play, which is completely ridiculous, and incredibly unintuitive.
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It isn't. Not for a single one.
True. First you have to go into Steam settings and tick a box. Then you can play
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Then you must have forgotten that 5 years ago you had to go into the settings and enable Steam Play, which is completely ridiculous, and incredibly unintuitive.
One setting... Five years ago... I mean, if we're being that pedantic, I also need to install the game before I launch it.
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One setting... Five years ago... I mean, if we're being that pedantic, I also need to install the game before I launch it.
Its not pedantic. I've seen entire videos made trashing Linux for this single reason, because they didn't know the setting existed. And how would they? It doesn't give any sort of prompt and "Steam Play" is just nonsense words that don't indicate anything having to do with linux.
That's just the tip of the iceberg, especially when looking at games outside of Steam. Because that becomes WAY more complicated. And we should want people to play more than just Steam games.
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Its not pedantic. I've seen entire videos made trashing Linux for this single reason, because they didn't know the setting existed. And how would they? It doesn't give any sort of prompt and "Steam Play" is just nonsense words that don't indicate anything having to do with linux.
That's just the tip of the iceberg, especially when looking at games outside of Steam. Because that becomes WAY more complicated. And we should want people to play more than just Steam games.
We clearly have differing opinions on what the word "simple" means, as per your original reply.
I would argue that games outside of steam is almost as simple as steam, if not for the fact that you need to know what software to download in advanced.
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We clearly have differing opinions on what the word "simple" means, as per your original reply.
I would argue that games outside of steam is almost as simple as steam, if not for the fact that you need to know what software to download in advanced.
We clearly have differing opinions on what the word "simple" means
"Simple" was my reply to a very specific statement of "hit the play button in Steam", it was not a generic statement. You're purposefully taking what I said out of context.
I would argue that games outside of steam is almost as simple as steam
And I would call that a blatant lie.
if not for the fact that you need to know what software to download in advanced
And a long list of information on how to configure it. Hence the tutorial.
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We clearly have differing opinions on what the word "simple" means
"Simple" was my reply to a very specific statement of "hit the play button in Steam", it was not a generic statement. You're purposefully taking what I said out of context.
I would argue that games outside of steam is almost as simple as steam
And I would call that a blatant lie.
if not for the fact that you need to know what software to download in advanced
And a long list of information on how to configure it. Hence the tutorial.
What kind of gaes do you play? I've not needed to configue a single game in years, just download and play. I even pirate games and thattoo is just download and play. What kind of configuration are you talking about?
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What kind of gaes do you play? I've not needed to configue a single game in years, just download and play. I even pirate games and thattoo is just download and play. What kind of configuration are you talking about?
If you already play games on Linux then you already know. There's no need for me to explain it. Just watch the video in OP.
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- Download Heroic
- Download drivers
- Click play
Playing on Linux is not that hard. Dont make it look like it is.
I so wish that was the case.
Half the games I tried on Heroic don't run and most of them run at <5 FPS even though I own a 4070 and the games I try to run are e.g. Bioshock. Number 1. The original, non-remastered one.
And stuff like Dawn of War crashes once I start the game, same as Bioshock 2, Neverwinter Nights and quite a few other older titles.
And even games that generally work fine (like Shadow of Mordor) sometimes randomly decide to run at 2 FPS.
If anyone has advice about what could cause that, I'd be grateful.
I'm on Fedora 41, running newest proprietary Nvidia drivers.
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Why do you make an entire video in Swedish and then make the title in English?
Because Youtube autotranslates these stupid titles. I hate that, since it makes it really hard to know whether you are going to understand the video before clicking it.
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Because Youtube autotranslates these stupid titles. I hate that, since it makes it really hard to know whether you are going to understand the video before clicking it.
This is not YouTube.
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I so wish that was the case.
Half the games I tried on Heroic don't run and most of them run at <5 FPS even though I own a 4070 and the games I try to run are e.g. Bioshock. Number 1. The original, non-remastered one.
And stuff like Dawn of War crashes once I start the game, same as Bioshock 2, Neverwinter Nights and quite a few other older titles.
And even games that generally work fine (like Shadow of Mordor) sometimes randomly decide to run at 2 FPS.
If anyone has advice about what could cause that, I'd be grateful.
I'm on Fedora 41, running newest proprietary Nvidia drivers.
In that case you seriously fucked something up when installing the drivers
You sure you only have 1 GPU? (No APU) and how did you install them drivers?
And most importantly: What Wine prefix are you using, what wine Version, and did you restart your PC after doing updates?
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In that case you seriously fucked something up when installing the drivers
You sure you only have 1 GPU? (No APU) and how did you install them drivers?
And most importantly: What Wine prefix are you using, what wine Version, and did you restart your PC after doing updates?
Playing on Linux is not that hard. Dont make it look like it is.
you seriously fucked something up when installing the drivers
how did you install them drivers?
What Wine prefix are you using, what wine Version