I’m currently on Win11 but I’m getting that familiar Linux itch and want to dual boot a while again. I tend to gravitate towards Ubuntu simply because it’s so big and well supported by most things.

I’ve run Arch in the past but I’ve gotten too old and lazy for that if I’d be completely honest. I have played with manjaro and endeavour though… and opensuse tumbleweed, rolling is kind of nice.

Not sure what I’d try out first this time so I figured I’d get some inspiration from you guys!

  • @Nyanix@beehaw.org
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    22 years ago

    I’ve been on Manjaro for 3 years, honestly love it, it’s treated me great for gaming and given me so little to have to fix that my wife has also been running it for 2 years.

  • Don't ask my name
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    12 years ago

    Save yourself a lot of trouble and get a secondary SSD to put Linux on instead of doing a traditional dual boot. Normal dual boots with windows suck ass and lead to problems.

    As for a distro, I keep going back to endeavourOS. It’s just so minimal out of the box, and I still can’t find anything to match the convinience of the AUR + Pacman for package management.

  • @thayer@lemmy.ca
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    2 years ago

    All of my workstations are now running Fedora Silverblue. Steam is installed via flatpak, and GPU is a Radeon 6800 XT. I also have a Steam Link for couch co-op. All is well on the gaming front!

    Debian Sid and Arch have run equally well with this setup. Your choice of distro matters much less now compared to a few years ago, especially if you favour a flatpak workflow.

    Edit: typos!

  • @jakepi@beehaw.org
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    12 years ago

    I would take a look at pop_os. It’s Ubuntu, but without Snap and a closer to mainline kernel version. They have a lot of great usability tweaks too.

    I run Arch BTW. I just like to make things difficult :)

    • nlmOP
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      02 years ago

      I installed Kubuntu… I couldn’t be assed to resize my efi partition to a gig and disrupt windows… Done that in the past with varying results. Wish they didn’t require it to be that big tbh.

      I do miss Arch… wouldn’t surprise me if I’ll install it again soon.

      Kubuntu works. But where’s the fun in that? :)

      It’s like… I installed it, messed with lutris a bit (needed a newer version) and installed Diablo 4, everything works… and now I feel like I’m missing out somehow. :)

      • @jakepi@beehaw.org
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        12 years ago

        You’re missing out on chasing the dragon for the latest and greatest. :)

        Arch is fine once you get it setup, but I feel like the nerd in us can never just leave it be. I’ll probably go back to pop_os next major release they have.

        • nlmOP
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          02 years ago

          Sometimes I wish I had a machine dedicated to nothing but reinstalling different distros. :)

          It can get a bit disrupting to do it on your main rig too often.

  • @hobbsc@lemmy.sdf.org
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    12 years ago

    Mint Cinnamon. Things generally work put of the box. There’s the occasional weird config mess to get into but it’s Linux.

    • Bucket_of_Truth
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      12 years ago

      The standalone Nvidia driver install panel makes installing the right gpu drivers a breeze.

      The only problem I ran into is that it won’t boot with my main monitor (1440p 165hz) plugged in. I have to use my secondary monitor (4k 60hz) to install the OS and Nvidia drivers first, then shutdown and plug in the main monitor and everything works on the next boot.

    • BananaTrifleViolin
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      02 years ago

      Yeah I use Cinnamon too. It’s fairly polished and can delve into Ubuntu or Debian when missing something you really want. I find the Nvidia drivers are easy to set up and maintain, and Steam works reasonably well (I have had a few quirks but nothing that I couldn’t resolve).

      • Communist
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        02 years ago

        Make sure you’re running the sdl environment variable that makes them native on Wayland, in my experience when that’s on it makes my games that are native significantly more performant.

  • brotherballan
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    12 years ago

    I’ve been running Linux Mint for a few years now and it’s been really good for me. Runs games through Steam and Lutris about as good as I’ve had it.

    I’ve also run other distros like Pop! and Fedora here and there but they seem to give me more issues.

  • @t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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    12 years ago

    I tend to gravitate towards Ubuntu simply because it’s so big and well supported by most things. I’ve run Arch in the past but I’ve gotten too old and lazy for that if I’d be completely honest. I have played with manjaro and endeavour though… and opensuse tumbleweed, rolling is kind of nice.

    Are you me? Did you also use BlackArch for a while, and still use Rainmeter? :P

    • nlmOP
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      2 years ago

      Ubuntu does make things easier.

      I had everything set up the way I wanted it in Ubuntu the other day… but something still itched a bit so now I’m on Tumbleweed and feeling better. :D

      Though Diablo 4 tends to crash after playing it for a while… not sure if I’d have the same issue in Ubuntu or not, might have to triple boot for a bit just to try it out. I really do want to stay here in chameleon land though so it would probably be better to just try to find the cause of the crashing.

      I do think this is a pretty common thing among us linux geeks though, never really feeling content and just wanting to try everything. :)

      Never did try BlackArch or Rainmeter though!

      I’ve played around with plenty of distros though… Slackware, Redhat, Gentoo, Arch, *buntu, SuSE (before they split into openSUSE), openSUSE, Manjaro, Endeavour OS and probably a bunch more that I can’t even remember but those are probably the ones I’ve played around with the most.

  • @s900mhz@beehaw.org
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    12 years ago

    A little background for context. I’m gamer and professional software developer. I’ve been dual booting windows 11 and pop os for awhile. Windows for games and pop os for everything else… Over the weekend I switched to NixOS. This came with a learning curve which I spent a day or so learning. I’ve been getting the hang of it now and I love it so much. I definitely recommend it. I managed to get steam working without much fiddling and my emulators. It’s been great! The benefits for programming are obvious. Allowing me to basically stop using docker dev containers.

    I completely removed windows from my computer and I’m very happy.

    • nlmOP
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      02 years ago

      We used to run Ubuntu at my last job, it was so nice! I’m back in Windows land now though…

      • @s900mhz@beehaw.org
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        02 years ago

        Yeah my job recently started letting developers choose between windows and Mac now which is a step in the right direction… their excuse is that all their security software doesn’t run in Linux… Ill accept using a Mac over WSL though, that was a huge pain

        • nlmOP
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          12 years ago

          I’m still happy WSL exists, it’s definitely better than nothing if you’re stuck in Windows land!

          • @s900mhz@beehaw.org
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            02 years ago

            Yeah absolutely! I know I dissed it, but I was happy to have it when I was stuck on windows for work.

  • TrinitronX
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    02 years ago

    In the past, I had been using Ubuntu LTS releases for my main HTPC. That original install had been upgraded many times, but actually started out as an Ubuntu spin-off called Mythbuntu. Of course since Steam on Linux was first released, Ubuntu was the most well-supported distro at the time, and still technically is (Look in Steam’s .local install directory and you’ll still find ubuntu12_32, ubuntu12_64 folders which are pre-packaged dependencies & libraries for steam-runtime built against Ubuntu’s core libs for each architecture). It ran many games fine, and the added bonus of a distro focused on being an HTPC meant that I could use mythgame as a frontend for emulators, steam, or whatever else needed a launcher. Meanwhile, the main focus of MythTV was being an OSS DVR that supported TV capture cards, commercial skip, and transcoding.

    It ran all those things well, except trancoding (no VAAPI, only VDPAU & not many codecs), up to a point when my original Nvidia GT240 card became deprecated by Nvidia’s binary blob drivers. Thanks to the version-pinned 340 proprietary drivers not being well supported on newer kernels, I have been forced into a hardware upgrade cycle. Decided to go with AMD this time around, but the first card has some kind of hardware issue (9 times out of 10 after a reboot, the amdgpu driver says the SMU won’t init properly… same on windows but no helpful error messages, just doesn’t work at all). The card arrived without an OEM box, and seemed suspiciously in used condition although it wasn’t sold to me as a used model. Thanks to testing in a rolling-release distro based on Arch, I was able to prove that it wasn’t due to software, but instead was a hardware issue. I’m going to send that GPU back and get another one to replace it once prices get less insane.

    I tested out various Manjaro LiveCDs to check if it was a software or driver problem, and did get the GPU working about once every 10 reboots. I decided to go with a full install of Manjaro Sway edition to try and test out wayland & a more minimal window manager. I didn’t think I’d like it at first, as I’d always avoided using i3wm in the past… but actually it’s starting to grow on me and I think I’ll try this out as a daily driver for a while. After following some instructions on the Arch wiki to identify missing steam-runtime dependencies and installing them via pacman, everything works, including Proton-based games. Technically Steam is still running under Xwayland, as evidenced by xlsclients output, but it works and seems much snappier than running on Ubuntu with X11.

    • nlmOP
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      02 years ago

      Geez… you guys are making this hard… now I’m bouncing between ubuntu, pop, endeavour and manjaro…

      Nicely formatted post by the way :)

  • @ostrosco@beehaw.org
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    02 years ago

    I’ve been using Fedora for the past few years and have been pretty happy with it. It updates at just the right cadence for me where I get new stuff pretty quickly but I’m not on a rolling release.

  • sophs [she/her]
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    02 years ago

    I’m on Arch right now, migrated to it after almost 2 years on Fedora. I’ll probably still go back and forth between the two.