Dual-booting Windows 11 and Fedora 38. Gaming on Win 11 is, as expected, most times great. I want to migrate to Fedora and use it as a daily driver, and while it does a damn good job at doing just that, it’s disturbingly aweful at gaming. I’ve installed Steam and I set out to try a couple of games to see what it would handle.

It should be noted that I’m not a hardcore gamer, and I’ve historically not gamed on PC (but PS and Xbox), so I don’t have quite the extensive library of games on Steam like many others do. I’ve got Game Pass, but that won’t help me here. Anyhow… the games I’ve tried to run are games that I currently have on Steam.

Hardware:

  • CPU: Ryzen 5 4600G

  • GPU: RX 6700 XT

  • RAM: 32 GB 3200 MHz

  • SSD: 4 TB M.2

  • I expected Civilization VI to run fine, and… it did. although anti-aliasing decided not to work.

  • Humankind, does not run. At all.

  • Broforce does in fact run perfectly fine!

  • F1 2015 (don’t laugh, it was free), does run and it does in fact run at max settings, but the controls (keyboard + xbox) are fucked, so that’s also a no go.

  • Red Dead Redemption 2, hahaha no.

  • Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, hahah no, for some reason.

While I “love” and support “Linux”, this doesn’t cut it. Why am I even “here”? I’ve been using “Linux” for at least 15 years (incl. Windows),but if I want to play a God damn fucking game, I want to play it now, not tomorrow, or after I’ve googled a fucking hack that’ll break x amount of shit and take me hours to get running. This is why I’ll still use Win 11 as my daily.

Fedora as an OS is smooth, quick AF and I very much like it. Gaming on it? God no.

My point is, while Win 11 is basically “don’t worry, it’ll run!”, Linux (or Fedora at least is “I don’t know… maybe?”. That won’t convince a lot of people, and currently not me.

EDIT: THIS IS WHY LEMMY IS BETTER THAN REDDIT. HUMAN CONVERSATION. THANK YOU ALL

  • lckdscl@whiskers.bim.boats
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    1 year ago

    Any distro should work provided you have the right packages. The package maintainers will ensure the versions play nicely together. What matter a bit more is X11 vs. Wayland, and Nvidia vs AMD, but in general, I’m fairly confident you should be able to play on any distro through Steam. Some distros come packed with drivers/wine/etc. for convenience, some you might have to compile them. The former will advertise their “gaming-readiness”, I would stick to those. Outside of gaming, you will get the same smoothness you find with Fedora with other distros.

    • _I_@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Excellent reply! I’m just running stock Fedora Workstation 38 on an all AMD-system. On paper, this should not be a problem. Maybe I’m missing a teeny tiny detail, but that’s part of the game I guess,lol. I’ll keep using Fedora as a daily and boot into Win 11 when I wanna game. Proton is moving fast though, so hopefully I’ll run “pure linux” soon.