Deciding between mint and fedora, quick questions
from Emtity_13@lemmy.sdf.org to linux@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 06:41
https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/35961465

What are some recommend changes for gaming for linux distros? Know I or to get steam and portion, but not sure what else

Have a AMD Gpu and cpu if that is important

#linux

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stuner@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 06:48 next collapse

If you have an AMD GPU (except for the very latest GPUs), you should be good out of the box. The AMD driver comes pre-installed with mesa.

Other than that… don’t use NTFS to store your games.

Edit: Maybe I misunderstood your question. I understood it as: What are some recommended changes to do after installing a Linux distro. Did you meant to ask about differences between distros?

Emtity_13@lemmy.sdf.org on 04 Jun 06:52 collapse

NTFS?

stuner@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 06:57 next collapse

The Windows filesystem: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTFS. Basically, don’t try to share the game drive with Windows.

Luffy879@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 08:29 next collapse

Yes, ntfs

It will, if your games even work, nuke your performance into oblivion

sxan@midwest.social on 04 Jun 10:00 collapse

It’s a Microsoft network filesystem. They’re probably telling you: don’t leave your games on an old Windows computer and try to remote mount the drive with NTFS; if you do, you’ll be sorry. Re-install the games on Linux.

catloaf@lemm.ee on 04 Jun 11:20 next collapse

NTFS has nothing to do with the network. Maybe you’re thinking of NFS? But natively Windows uses SMB.

lagoon8622@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 11:24 next collapse

Wtf? NTFS is the NT File System.

catloaf@lemm.ee on 04 Jun 11:29 collapse

For some reason my phone ate the “nothing” in “NTFS has nothing to do with the network”. I’ve put it back.

lagoon8622@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 11:30 collapse

Ahh got it. I was just confused for a moment 😁

sxan@midwest.social on 04 Jun 13:53 collapse

Yeah. NFS and CIFS got mangled in my brain.

lagoon8622@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 11:27 next collapse

Wtf also, “NT” in “NTFS” does not mean “network”, holy shit. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTFS

sxan@midwest.social on 04 Jun 13:51 collapse

Well, I didn’t say “NT” stood for “network”, but you’re right that I was wrong about it being a network filesystem.

holy shit.

I’m glad you’re so passionate about people being wrong!

lagoon8622@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 13:57 collapse

I didn’t really mean to sound mad, sorry.

sxan@midwest.social on 04 Jun 18:09 collapse

Naw, I didn’t think you were mad; it was funny that you sounded so shocked that someone on the internet could be wrong.

vintageballs@feddit.org on 04 Jun 19:07 collapse

It’s not a network file system. It’s a regular file system for hard drives, SSDs and such, which is used by default on Windows since Windows NT (that’s where the NT comes from - it doesn’t stand for network but “new technology”).

The implementation in Windows is closed source meaning the file system had to be reverse engineered to even work at all under Linux. Support nowadays is okay-ish, but as soon as you don’t properly shutdown your computer or use the file system under Windows, you will run into weird problems.

Also it just straight up doesn’t work for most games running under wine.

Eyck_of_denesle@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 06:49 next collapse

Can you be more specific. Can’t understand your question.

Diplomjodler3@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 08:56 collapse

Can’t decide if aneurysm posting or non-native speaker.

fhein@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 08:00 next collapse

I use Fedora (KDE) and game a lot. While I mostly like it, I’ve had some problems with it that were non-trivial to solve, so if you’re a Linux beginner I would not necessarily recommend it to you.

Perhaps Bazzite would be a good option? It’s based on Fedora and created with gaming in mind. I got it recommended here and installed it on a friend’s kid’s computer and he’s very happy with it so far.

There’s also Nobara which builds on Fedora to create a gaming-focused distro.

Alxe@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 09:25 next collapse

Second Fedora, because it’s just so good. Bazzite is the goal if gaming is your primary concern.

warmaster@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 22:32 collapse

I use Bazzite, I freaking love it.

just_another_person@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 08:38 next collapse

Fedora.

chaoticnumber@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 11:40 next collapse

Bazzite is probably a safe bet.

phantomwise@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 11:50 next collapse

In addition to steam with proton, you can add :

  • ProtonGE : it’s a modified version of Proton, if games don’t work with the default Proton versions you can try this one and sometimes it fixes the issue.
    • Don’t bother installing it manually, though, just install ProtonUpQt with your package manager, run it, and have it install the latest ProtonGE for you. Then you go in steam, in your game’s compatibility options, and you choose ProtonGE in the list. It’s not needed for most games, but it’s nice for those few cases where the game doesn’t work.
  • Protontricks

AMD GPU is good, it means you won’t want to die installing Nvidia drivers if you choose Fedora.

Thebigguy@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 12:01 next collapse

I use open suse it’s nice

news.opensuse.org/…/gaming-on-linux-how-os-stacks…

uxellodunum@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 12:02 next collapse

Go Fedora for Gaming with new hardware. If you’re a couple generations behind in hardware, Mint will do just fine.

Fedora gets new hardware support faster along with newer drivers, same with Arch and Arch-based distros (like EndeavourOS, BazziteOS)

breadguy@kbin.earth on 04 Jun 12:03 collapse

isn't bazzite fedora based

voytrekk@sopuli.xyz on 04 Jun 12:22 collapse

It is. Maybe they meant CachyOS, which is a popular Arch based distro.

xylol@leminal.space on 04 Jun 12:03 next collapse

When you launch steam go to steam settings and enable compatibility to use proton, that’ll get a larger portion of games to work

3dmvr@piefed.social on 04 Jun 14:56 next collapse

I use cachyos, it has an install gaming packages button that does all that for you, also have amd gpu and cpu, I use blender and steam fine

3dmvr@piefed.social on 04 Jun 14:59 collapse

I did have to use gparted to manually partiition and set the boot flag since automatically it didnt work, just did exactly what it tried to do automatically, manually, takes 5 seconds. Otherwise it's really easy, nicer and faster to install than windows.

You plugin the usb, boot in, and its in kde running off the usb, so you can kinda test out kde plasma desktop environment, and the install is hella fast, coming from reinstalling windows the week before, insane, like a 100000th of the time. Then you just go through a fully graphical install process, after that clicking buttons to install most of the drivers and apps you need fairly easily, without searching on your own.

3dmvr@piefed.social on 04 Jun 15:00 next collapse

You also choose your desktop environment out of many options, plasmas just the default, you may have a much higher chance of breaking your install doing something later compared to bazzite

3dmvr@piefed.social on 04 Jun 15:00 collapse

But bazzites install process felt hobbled together in comparison

3dmvr@piefed.social on 04 Jun 15:02 collapse

Every thing ppl mention here comes with cachyos or through the gaming packages button after installing

ikidd@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 14:10 collapse

Mint is still on X11, though there is Wayland support in experimental stage. But if I were gaming, I’d find a distro with up to date Wayland support out of the box, like Fedora.