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There’s no shame in dual booting. Moving all your non-gaming stuff away from windows is a big step in the right direction.

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This is the thing which keeps me from switching entirely to Linux. A friend of mine needs twice the amount of Time to start his Games (which is something I would have no Problem with) and what makes it not worth switching imo is that he loses the sound from Discord when he plays. He needs to restart DC then. And no one knows why ._.

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Is he using PipeWire or PulseAudio? I solved my audio problems by installing PipeWire.

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It’s always best to try it well ahead of time even if it’s just for having that shader cache setup and ready to go.

Also trying to get trainers to run is a bit of a nightmare. I use steamtinkerlauncher for that and it’s hit or miss I’d say.

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sudo apt-get friends to play games with

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Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree... Done
Reading state information... Done
E: Unable to locate package friends
E: Unable to locate package to
E: Unable to locate package play
E: Unable to locate package games
E: Unable to locate package with
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uses Linux

wants to run proprietary Windows Games on it

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I don’t need to adhere to the FOSS philosophy in the extreme to be allowed to use Linux

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Thats not the point. You buy Games by Developers with limited resources. They dont care about FOSS you could say, in many cases. So you are unsupported.

Linux runs Linux Apps, its Essence is that it is a free OS, that you can trust.

Running proprietary stuff made for other Platforms is interesting but a Battle. It makes no sense you could say.

It makes Sense for Valve, as they save themselves Billions in Windows Licenses and they can make a tailored device. And they sell Games.

For you, paying for Games and then working to make them run, I dont know.

Not that I dont like the idea, but its the job of Developers to make the Games run.

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Sure… Which is why Valve has built Proton, which makes nearly all PC games run on Linux… Sure, the developers of the games themselves should have made the Linux port, but for many developers it’s cost prohibitive to support another platform with very few potential customers.

But the more players who run Linux (and Steam Deck by extension), the larger the incentive for developers to support Linux natively. And in turn more games will get made for Linux, which will draw in more people to switch to Linux.

So as long as my game runs, then I don’t care whether it was the original developer, Valve or an open-source developer why wrote the code that made it work. And luckily I’m one of those people that don’t mind having to tinker a bit to make things work (hence why I’m on Linux in the first place)

If we as gamers stubbornly refuse to switch to Linux until our games are natively ported, then developers might as well just develop their games for Windows, where the players are…

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linuxmemes

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I use Arch btw


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