I just made the jump in November. Gaming pc was the last computer in the house with windows. Now it's an all Linux household, well minus the router on FreeBSD.
I play world of warcraft and baldur's gate 3. installed cachyos yesterday and downloaded both games through Steam
i was expecting the games to be laggy or glitchy, but they run smooth as butter. 240fps on WoW, I think it might perform better than Windows 11 but at least as good.
im sure something about linux will annoy me eventually and I'll switch back to Windows, but I don't want to.
I think the inflection point for mass adoption will between 5-10% market share. Then Linux will be too big to ignore and game studios will have to make their games work without kernel level anti-cheat or other restrictions or lose a very significant amount of sales relative to the cost of implementing the required changes.
On linux mint I can get games to run but they run horribly. I wish I could figure out the issue because running most of my games on linux would be awesome
I second this. Your experience is highly unusual, most of my games run very well on Linux (framerates within 10% of Windows). And that's with an Nvidia GPU.
You can have a the pain points with Linux or you can have the pain points of Windows and have tiktok and facebook added to your start memu, AI force added to your taskbar, your searches in the start menu sent off to microsoft, AI forced into your browser and notepad, have file explorer take multiple seconds to start up, Edge block downloads of .exe files with DANGEROUS FILE warnings, and I can go on and on.
We're starting to see more and more reports about this occurring on Windows 11. Especially in the VR community. Windows has pushed a ton of updates that break or even brick drivers. Also I've seen games have to be modified to run on it.
Why? I've heard pretty good things about Framework laptops running perfectly with factory installed operating systems. Also the Steam deck seems to work better than my Windows laptop.
A lot of the issues that Linux users run into these days are running hardware and software designed specifically for Windows. With the advent of hardware and software designed for Linux it's not surprising we are seeing stability improvements.
I have an obnoxious issue on Windows 11 that I cannot fix. I have an RTX 5060 and the monitor will not receive a signal after the computer wakes from sleep.
For years I dabbled with Linux and I tried switching from windows to Linux many times. There were always compatibility issues with some software and games that made me return to windows. Earlier this year I got so fed up with Microsoft’s relentless invasion of my privacy, annoying nudges and other enshitification efforts in Windows that I decided that not only is windows dead to me, but any software I can’t run Linux is dead to me as well.
That was months ago and my only regret is that I didn’t do this sooner.
I understand people need certain apps for work and maybe those need windows. Others have absolutely no power over the machines their work gives them, I’ve been there, no judgement. This is just my experience.
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