twilo99
Member
I had some friends argue this in high school in the early nineties.
I had the same experience in late 90s…
One day tho
I had some friends argue this in high school in the early nineties.
Windows performed better in everything even on AMD GPUs except for the Strange Brigade game.Eh....nothing new in that video that was worth the bump really
Windows performed better in everything even on AMD GPUs except for the Strange Brigade game.
Here is what you're really looking for:
No kidding. it was largely meaningless. Any Linux gaming video that doesn't include Bazzite or CachyOS isn't worth watching.Eh....nothing new in that video that was worth the bump really
It also 100% depends on the title being played. DX12 games are the ones that suffer the most on Linux with nvidia GPUs due to the way proton and vulkan worth together with nvidia GPUs. Sadly DX12 is a huge part of the games being made and its the biggest reason I have long argued that all developers should just switch to Vulkan. On AMD DX-to-Vulkan translation works VERY well and often has an neglible effect on performance. People confuse translation with emulation. Translation is about providing a new map to direct calls to specific spots in the kernal, but all these games still use the same x86 CPUs. Still removing one layer of translation is never a bad thing.Nvidia performance: "Not as yikes as the internet might have you believe."
I'm glad they mentioned this. Anti-linux people usually quote the "30%" performance drop due to the driver bug with Nvidia instead of giving you hard numbers because it makes the issue look much worse than it actually is. When you look at the numbers, the performance drop is only around a 10 FPS difference. Which hardly makes a game unplayable.
I had the same experience in late 90s…
One day tho
It's not over until the fatAloylady sings.
@Mister WolfKacho
Please continue thewarpolite discussion after watching the video.
Go back to 2008 and you can find posts just like that confidently exhausting how PC gaming was dying out.Linux will never be the future of gaming, because Linux will never be mainstream.
gaming will go where the mainstream is, and as long as Linux isn't officially supported by the likes of CoD and the entirety of EA, it will also be a suboptimal alternative.
Bazzite is screwed, it's led by a Microsoft employee and they care more about DEI than the product.No kidding. it was largely meaningless. Any Linux gaming video that doesn't include Bazzite or CachyOS isn't worth watching.
Plus, its not ALWAYS about benchmarks. It's also about consistency. When I was using Linux, I almost never got shader comp stutter and got far less on titles that were known for it.
Go back to the 1990s and you can find posts of people talking about Linux being the future of gaming.Go back to 2008 and you can find posts just like that confidently exhausting how PC gaming was dying out.
Bazzite is screwed, it's led by a Microsoft employee and they care more about DEI than the product.
Go back to the 1990s and you can find posts of people talking about Linux being the future of gaming.
No one is going back to the Windows man. Even if it means losing COD. At this point it's cultural, and I don't mean gaming culture. Just the corporate exodus.
Today, Linux keeps getting better while Windows keeps getting worse.
Today, Linux keeps getting better while Windows keeps getting worse.
Windows 98 is certainly not better than Windows 11 in any regard, especially gaming, which is the main topic here, so I fail to understand your point.
Are you referring to bugs related to software patches, etc. ? Or is it "copilot"? Non of these things have affected my gaming machine, which has been solid since Windows 10
The improvements in Linux seems bigger because there is a lot to fix...
Windows 98 is certainly not better than Windows 11 in any regard, especially gaming, which is the main topic here, so I fail to understand your point.
...and native Linux versions and APIs, because Proton/Wine will be forever a lottery for new games and new graphics features.There is more work to be done, but that is primarily with drivers.
...and native Linux versions and APIs, because Proton/Wine will be forever a lottery for new games and new graphics features.
I still can't find a way that works for me to increase "digital vibrance" permanently like we do in the Nvidia Control panel.Linux has come so far but for me it still has a very long way to go. So many of the games I play don't work on it. Also, the overall user experience of Linux is a nightmare. If you're just loading up a web browser, a couple basic programs, and Steam then yeah it'll be perfectly fine but so many times I've found myself wasting time trying to get things working. For example, try undervolting your GPU on Linux. It seems simple when you look it up but I could never get it to work.
Plus, my PC is for more than just gaming. Not all the software I use is available on Linux.
As much as I don't like Microsoft/Windows I'm still going to use it because it's much easier to deal with. That said, I do hope Linux keeps improving but personally I don't see myself moving over to it in the forseeable future.
Linux has come so far but for me it still has a very long way to go. So many of the games I play don't work on it. Also, the overall user experience of Linux is a nightmare. If you're just loading up a web browser, a couple basic programs, and Steam then yeah it'll be perfectly fine but so many times I've found myself wasting time trying to get things working. For example, try undervolting your GPU on Linux. It seems simple when you look it up but I could never get it to work.
Plus, my PC is for more than just gaming. Not all the software I use is available on Linux.
As much as I don't like Microsoft/Windows I'm still going to use it because it's much easier to deal with. That said, I do hope Linux keeps improving but personally I don't see myself moving over to it in the forseeable future.
I still can't find a way that works for me to increase "digital vibrance" permanently like we do in the Nvidia Control panel.
I tried that but so far the auto starting didn't work.![]()
GitHub - ilya-zlobintsev/LACT: Linux GPU Configuration And Monitoring Tool
Linux GPU Configuration And Monitoring Tool. Contribute to ilya-zlobintsev/LACT development by creating an account on GitHub.github.com
![]()
GitHub - Tremeschin/nvibrant: 🟢 Nvidia Digital Vibrance on Wayland
🟢 Nvidia Digital Vibrance on Wayland. Contribute to Tremeschin/nvibrant development by creating an account on GitHub.github.com
Bazzite is screwed, it's led by a Microsoft employee and they care more about DEI than the product.
Go back to the 1990s and you can find posts of people talking about Linux being the future of gaming.
I am 100% gung-ho on Linux taking over.Linux has come so far but for me it still has a very long way to go. So many of the games I play don't work on it. Also, the overall user experience of Linux is a nightmare. If you're just loading up a web browser, a couple basic programs, and Steam then yeah it'll be perfectly fine but so many times I've found myself wasting time trying to get things working. For example, try undervolting your GPU on Linux. It seems simple when you look it up but I could never get it to work.
Plus, my PC is for more than just gaming. Not all the software I use is available on Linux.
As much as I don't like Microsoft/Windows I'm still going to use it because it's much easier to deal with. That said, I do hope Linux keeps improving but personally I don't see myself moving over to it in the forseeable future.
What do any of these Linux distros have that are better for gaming than just Mint with steam installed?Thanks for sharing this. I see CachyOS being the main gaming OS real soon.
I dont know how to answer that, but CachyOS and Bazzite are specifically built for gaming. CachyOS usually gets the best gaming benchmarks.What do any of these Linux distros have that are better for gaming than just Mint with steam installed?
That's a genuine question I have since I'm going to switch from Windows 10 extended support that end in october this year.
In my experience Mint is a very good everyday distro (I'm typing this from 22.3 right now!) but was a real pain to work with for a gaming machine. The kernel is always behind the likes of Cachy and Bazzite and I had some real bother getting nvidia drivers to run and perform properly with it. Granted its been some months since I tried but if you want a generally painless experience out of the box for gaming I'd use Bazzite.What do any of these Linux distros have that are better for gaming than just Mint with steam installed?
That's a genuine question I have since I'm going to switch from Windows 10 extended support that end in october this year.
I am super happy with Mint. I am so happy with it that I still have a hard time to even try out something else. I mean Mint is very slow with updates and stuff, compared to these new shiny distros like Cachy etc....but this can be also an advantage...its rock stable that way.What do any of these Linux distros have that are better for gaming than just Mint with steam installed?
That's a genuine question I have since I'm going to switch from Windows 10 extended support that end in october this year.