Free Windows 10 support ended for most people this past month, and the trend line of Linux usage has been quite clear leading up to this, as people prepared for the inevitable. An increase in Linux usage is also correlated to a drop in Chinese players, which did happen this month a little bit, but Linux usage is also trending up when filtering for English only. It’s worth noting that for all the official support Macs ever saw in gaming, they never represented anything better than about 5% of the market.

  • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I ws hoping r6 could be accessible but no. Still that friggin battleeye bullshit

    • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      It’s not that it’s not supported by Linux, but that the developers of BF6 choose not to support Linux.

      Personally speaking, fuck EA and fuck kernel level anti cheat anyway, good riddance.

      • Credibly_Human@lemmy.world
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        31 minutes ago

        Also fuck giving saudi arabia money. Sometimes its unavoidable, but this is a video game. There are other video games, but there is no regime worse than the saudi regime.

        “bUt ThEy DoNt OwN tHeM yEt”

        The price has been settled on, so any success from here on out absolutely does directly benefit the saudis.

  • Bamboodpanda@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    I spent the last two days building a machine from old parts and installing Linux Mint. It’s my first time using Linux and I am really surprised at how lovely it is. I am still learning, but I can easily see it replacing my home gaming PC. I have yet to find something I can’t get to work.

  • nasi_goreng@lemmy.zip
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    15 hours ago

    What makes the chart “only” on 3% is Chinese users. English Linux user alone has more than 6% percentage of Linux users.

    We need Chinese government for their independent tech stack to include Linux further. At the moment, there are already several Chinese distro with big companies porting their basic apps to Linux (like chat app, office app, etc).

    If Chinese gov force gaming company to support Linux as well, we will see a huge surge evenmore. There are a huge number of Chinese game that never made out of China, and exclusive to PC only.

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      16 hours ago

      Here’s a graphic showing that from this page:

      I wish there was a graphic that showed English users with SteamOS separated from non-SteamOS users, because I think if we get 5% of non-SteamOS users, we should start to see devs pay a lot more attention. We’re starting to see devs make SteamOS-specific versions (e.g. THPS 1&2 offline mode), so the next step is getting Linux-specific adjustments for more games.

      • nialv7@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        So 93% of the Linux users use English steam. I wonder how much of that is because Linux users just don’t bother to set system language (I am one of them), or maybe the language was not detected correctly.

      • edgemaster72@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        So uh, what happened between March and September 2021 that caused the current upward trend? Was the Windows 11 announcement that poorly received?

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          9 hours ago

          Yes, and 2021 was a perfect storm of a bunch of stuff:

          • Windows 11 would break compatibility with older processors
          • Steam Deck announced preorders in July - wouldn’t release until 2022, but there was a lot of excitement about Linux gaming
          • LTT made a video series (part 1 was Nov. 2021) where Linus used Linux exclusively for a month

          So yeah, a lot of people were curious at the time, and while not all of it was directly related to Windows 11, that certainly was a factor.

      • ampersandrew@lemmy.worldOP
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        16 hours ago

        THPS offline mode is the same version as elsewhere, but it magically allows itself to operate offline when it thinks it’s running on a Steam Deck, which you can do with a launch parameter. Baldur’s Gate 3 actually has a native Linux version that is only officially supported for Steam Deck, and that might be closer to what you’re referring to.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          15 hours ago

          which you can do with a launch parameter

          My point is they built functionality specifically for a Linux-based system. In THPS, that meant offline mode, but for other games it could be anti-cheat, where to store game saves, or default settings (I think Cyberpunk some?).

          My point is that Linux is getting on the radar of game devs, and that’ll increase a lot at some level of adoption. I think that level is 5% on desktop Linux.

          Baldur’s Gate 3 is a unicorn in a lot of ways, so that’s not exactly what I’m talking about, but it’s related. I’m not going to expect BG3-level of support from devs, THPS 1&2 would be so much more than we’re currently getting.

          • ampersandrew@lemmy.worldOP
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            15 hours ago

            It’s possible, but it’s also possible that they already had that offline segregation built into the code to support the Switch version, and that it was trivial to enable.

        • cmhe@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          On a separate note, the BG3 native Linux version is so strange. Larian is threating the SteamDeck like a console. As if it is a bundled OS+HW system with only one available game store and only one useable OS. So they are only releasing it in steam, not on any other store. As if that means it can only be installed on SteamDeck and not on other Linux systems on different Hardware. They forget that anyone can install other Linux distributions or even windows in SteamDecks or use other game stores.

          This decision is so strange, because it disadvantages people that bought the game for PC elsewhere and own a SteamDeck.

          Like will they make performance patches to their games gated behind which which store the game was bought from?

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    21 hours ago

    I think it will continue to rise. People are updating their rigs all the time. Whenever they update their rig they’ll have to ask themselves whether they want to continue with Windows on their new rig, or try with something new.

    Most will stay on Windows of course, but some don’t. And those who switch to Linux are likely not returning to Windows (for gaming at least).

    • ObjectivityIncarnate@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      I think it will continue to rise. People are updating their rigs all the time. Whenever they update their rig they’ll have to ask themselves whether they want to continue with Windows on their new rig, or try with something new.

      The vast majority of this increase is from people playing on Steam Decks, which run on Linux, not from people switching to Linux on their PCs.

      If it continues to rise, this is the reason. The general public is less and less into using a desktop at all as time goes on, much less running, and much less changing to, an extremely niche operating system on one.

      EDIT: The previous sentence is actually more of the reason, upon further reflection. The total number of people playing on desktops period is falling, and the vast majority of desktops are Windows, so non-Windows OSes will comparatively gain ‘market share’ as that happens, even if their numbers don’t change at all.

      • BigPotato@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Actually, the raw number percentage shows that the increase is due to Mint, Ubuntu, and Bazzite. Maybe people are installing Bazzite on their Deck but likely not the other two.

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        16 hours ago

        That’s not true. You can see on Steam Hardware Survey what OS people are running, and SteamOS only makes up 27% of Linux users on Steam, so the vast majority are on regular PCs.

        • ObjectivityIncarnate@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          The vast majority of the increase, is what I said. In other words, I’m saying it wouldn’t be nearly at the 3% mark without those users, and with over a quarter of all Linux users coming from the Steam Deck userbase, that is, in fact, true.

          • turdas@suppo.fi
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            8 hours ago

            Without the Steam Deck there’d be 27% fewer Linux users. So while that would indeed mean Linux wouldn’t yet be 3% of the total Steam userbase, I think you will find that 27% is not the majority.

            GamingOnLinux aggregates this data in a nicer way and as you can see there, the total Linux market share has gone from <1% five years ago to the 3% it is now. If that increase was mainly thanks to the Steam Deck, it would have to make up more like 75% of the Linux userbase rather than only 27%.

            Instead, as others have pointed out, SteamOS’s share has actually gone down rather than up, which is a natural consequence of the Steam Deck being relatively old now so fewer are being sold.

        • Katana314@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          Certainly interesting to look at the fastest-growing distros: Ubuntu (the well-known, popular option), Bazzite (the gaming-marketed one), Freedesktop (someone else can answer this for me), and CachyOS (the side-gaming one? Not quite a gaming OS but very good at it)

          • turdas@suppo.fi
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            14 hours ago

            “Freedesktop SDK” means the user is running Steam via Flatpak. They could be on any distro.

          • Leon@pawb.social
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            15 hours ago

            They said Steam OS, not Steam Deck.

            If you click on “Linux Version” it expands into a list. Steam OS Holo is the largest portion, but not the majority portion.

      • magic_lobster_party@fedia.io
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        20 hours ago

        The portion of people playing on SteamOS is steadily decreasing, which means new Linux users are on Steam Deck to a lesser extent.

      • CountVon@sh.itjust.works
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        20 hours ago

        The vast majority of this increase is from people playing on Steam Decks

        I believe this is incorrect. The Steam survey break down GPUs by description and the Deck’s GPU appears in the results as “AMD Vangogh”, which only accounts for 0.39% of respondents. That implies that the vast majority of survey respondents using Linux are actually on PC, not the Deck.

    • BreakerSwitch@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      Yeah, for me personally, I’ve got one or two devices that see irregular use that are linux now, but my main rig is still windows and will continue to be so, since I have a number of friends on xbox that I can get more cross play for via gamepass But since I’m currently boycotting microsoft, and don’t know how much longer friends will stick with xbox given their general market decline, and given all the stability issues with win11 lately due to an increase of AI code usage, and all the everything… It might be a matter of time

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    17 hours ago

    I have a Windows laptop specifically for gaming, but I end up using my Linux coding laptop for games in the end.

    It’s less hassle figuring out how to enable nvidia drivers on xorg in GNU linux so that I csn use Proton emulation than to deal with this weeks clusterfuck of windows update trying to make me turn on ads and spying and trick me into using a microsoft.com account to log in.

    I am not joking.

    The windows still has some dust on it from when I did some house renovations months ago, because I haven’t been bothered to use it.

    • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      Having been gaming on Linux for the past 10 years and facing basically 0 issues, I can also affirmatively I don’t understand the attachment to windows. I get it if you need specifically word or excel. and I guess if you’ve got kids who want to play fortnite.

      • magic_lobster_party@fedia.io
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        16 hours ago

        It’s mostly convenience. They know it works, so they keep using it.

        Luckily Microsoft is making it inconvenient to continue using Windows.

      • corbin@infosec.pub
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        14 hours ago

        Because sometimes Proton doesn’t work? Like, it’s good enough for most games, but there are always edge cases and games that randomly break one day.

        • CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          As of now, you have to make an effort to find a game that won’t work through Proton, aside from games with malware (anti-cheat).

      • Bennyboybumberchums@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        Because I dont like Linux. Ive tried multiple distros, and I do not like it. At all. Worse, I find that they only people who do like it are utter cunts who sniff their own farts. Reading up over the years while looking into it, theres a ungodly amount of comments from cunts shitting all over people asking simple questions. It was like a text based version of seeing kids shouting “NEWB!!!” in a COD lobby.

        All the issues I see people having with windows, Ive not had or Ive solved. And it was never hard, or complicated, or anything else. And whats more, no one acted like a cunt because someone had, what they considered a “dumb question”.

        In short, fuck linux. Fuck Windows as well, dont get me wrong. But FUCK LINUX. Windows I hate because of the company that makes it, Linux I hate because of the own fart sniffers who use it.

        • magic_lobster_party@fedia.io
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          14 hours ago

          My experience is the opposite.

          Whenever I have a problem with Linux, there’s often a solution available after some Googling. Often it’s just changing something in a configuration file. Not great, but at least doable.

          Whenever I have a problem with Windows, there’s often that one thread where someone details the exact same problem, and there’s some ”official Microsoft tech support” whose only contribution is to ask if they have tried to reboot the computer and then radio silence.

          • Bennyboybumberchums@lemmy.world
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            13 hours ago

            I cant lie, those Microsoft tech support “have you tried rebooting” gits are the worst. But outside of that, even on Reddit, you get actual help. With linux, I see an ocean of “what a fucking newb” type shit. Even in here, everyone sucking their own cock because they dont use windows anymore. And if you do, well, you must be a pleb. Like people cant just use what works for them, and leave it at that.

            And whats funny, is that everyone using linux is still having issues. They say its amazing, then harp on about not being able to play games and the solution is more often than not “have you tried installing this other distro???” Which is about as helpful as “have you tried turning it off and on again?”.

            Everyone uses whatever works for them. Windows, MacOS, linux, whatever. And that should be fine. Instead, its become some kind of dog shit console war. PC users looking down their noses at console users, console users looking down their nose at mobile users, ISO users looking down their nose at Android users, Android users looking down their nose at IOS users, linux users looking down their nose anyone that isnt using linux. And even then, “Why you still using Mint, mate? Dont you know its better to use OSpop for gaming???” Its this never ending hole of cunts all shitting all over everyone else. If only we could just enjoy what we are doing and shut the fuck up.

        • Katana314@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          I’ve definitely run into some snobbish “Accept my incorrect solutions and be grateful, or go back to Windows, newb” types of people. I don’t have much love for them. I recognize it takes patience to acclimate new users, but it’s part of the job.

          By and large I’m preferential to just stay with something that works; part of what pushed me off it has just been Microsoft themselves enshittifying the experience. I feel like I remember a day when Windows start search actually took you to what you wanted, and now “notepad” immediately queries the shopping network before your own program list, and when you get Notepad open it has a Copilot button.

          You’re doing the right thing as long as you stay on an OS that keeps you going day in and day out. I tried Linux earlier in the year on two distros that did NOT work as well as the internet said they would, and went back to Windows. More recently, tried another one and there were stupid difficulties - but I got past them, at a time when Windows issues were just giving me “This is the way it is now, just put up with it”.

        • ampersandrew@lemmy.worldOP
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          16 hours ago

          You’re on Lemmy, a site people use when they don’t like reddit. You don’t see any reason why there might also be a ton of people here who use Linux, an operating system you use when you don’t like Windows?

          • Bennyboybumberchums@lemmy.world
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            13 hours ago

            I dont give a fuck where I am, you start looking down your nose at people, Im gonna fucking say something. Snobby twats deserve every slap they get. As for using linux, use whatever works for you. Just dont start treating other people like shit just because they dont do the same thing you do. “I dont understand people who still use windows…” Cool, no one gives a fuck what you do or dont understand. I dont understand why you piss about with different linux distros, but here we are, and you dont give a fuck that I think that, right? And nor should you. You should just go about your day. Which is why I dont spend my time in windows forums moaning about linux users being snobs. I just get on with my day. And you lot should too. I know the console wars are over now, but fucks sake, lets not start PC vs linux wars now.

            • ysjet@lemmy.world
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              10 hours ago

              There’s something deeply ironic about how angry you are towards people because they disagree with your OS choice.

              Perhaps some introspection might be in order, hmm?

        • poke@sh.itjust.works
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          16 hours ago

          I’ve definitely seen angry people respond to windows bug reports on various apps. Is the Linux community worse? Anectodally, I would agree with you. Its also fine to have a preference, and I understand needing to besmirch your own because some people on Lemmy are toxic particularly around open source projects, but like, I try to not stoop to that level. I am happy youve generally had a good time bug fixing in Windows, unfortunately I switched away because my graphics drivers regularly crashed on Windows and I’ve never had said issue on Bazzite. Could it be my fault somewhere? Sure. I’ve had a better time since I left, though. Guess I’m a fart sniffer. Just wanted to voice that not everyone has had this experience, is all. Have a good one, hope you cheer up.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          15 hours ago

          If you like Windows, that’s 100% fine, keep using it.

          But I’m genuinely curious, what didn’t you like? Which distro(s) did you try? What problems did you run into?

          I ask because you obviously cared enough to try it out but had a bad experience, so that’s something we could maybe look into as Linux enthusiasts.

          I’m never going to berate anyone for their choice of OS, use whatever works for you. For me, that’s Linux, mostly because I found a workflow that works really well for me and it’s a pain to replicate on Windows. My SO still uses Windows because that’s what they like, and it’s totally fine, I’ll even help them fix stuff when it breaks. I honestly don’t care what people end up using, but I will mention my preference if I think others might be interested.

        • wizblizz@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          There’s always one engorged asshole that had to show up and be a complete prick about people liking something. Fuck all the way off

          • Bennyboybumberchums@lemmy.world
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            8 hours ago

            You do realise that Im talking about YOU doing that, right? This me giving it BACK to you. And oh look, none of you like it. Funny how that works, aint it? Now, why dont you “fuck all the way off”.

      • Deestan@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        I run Windows normally.

        How long does your Window box function without updates? How long does it remain safe? Historically, a few months at best until they bundle telemetry in a new way. Then you need to find another rando dude’s github for workarounds.

        Anyway what you are describing is literally a hassle that for me is just not worth it. I can do all that and set up and update group policies for updates over and over oooooor I can literally spend less mental energy figuring out how to configure my drivers on Linux.

        What you do works for you and you feel it is convenient. That is fine.

      • PoliteDudeInTheMood@lemmy.ca
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        16 hours ago

        Oh that’s handy, I set group policies on my wife’s Win10 computer, but I guess InControl automates that process. Nice.

        I switched to Linux last year, but the wife has no interest in any of that. So I set the group policy and haven’t seen a single thing about Windows 11 popup on her computer… yet. But I have Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC flashed to a usb stick taped to her computer in case they find a workaround for that.

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    19 hours ago

    According to statcounter, Linux desktop was over 4% marketshare in April 2025, damn that’s impressive.

    We really are getting there.

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        15 hours ago

        I’m not so sure Valve is the right maintainer for the core desktop. The Deck works well, but mainly what Valve is maintaining is the Game Mode feature and Proton. Everything else is largely better handed off to a bigger group.

        • Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          10 hours ago

          Tbf, I think people are hoping for mainstream SteamOS as the “safe supported option”, because they are afraid of an “unintuitive experience” (This is basically a Linus Sebastian demographic problem).

          Personally, I think that’s a bad judgement call (as platforms like Bazzite have already proven that an official SteamOS environment isn’t required to have a good time gaming and using your machine), but I guess that means there’ll be even more excitement once that releases.

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    20 hours ago

    SteamOS Holo 64 bit - 27.18% (-0.47%)

    Arch Linux 64 bit - 10.32% (-0.66%)

    Linux Mint 22.2 64 bit - 6.65% (+6.65%)

    CachyOS 64 bit - 6.01% (+1.32%)

    Ubuntu Core 22 64 bit - 4.55% (+0.55%)

    Freedesktop SDK 25.08 (Flatpak runtime) 64

    bit - 4.29% (+4.29%)

    Bazzite 64 bit - 4.24% (+4.24%)

    Ubuntu 24.04.3 LTS 64 bit - 3.70% (+3.70%)

    Linux Mint 22.1 64 bit - 2.56% (-5.65%)

    EndeavourOS Linux 64 bit - 2.32% (-0.08%)

    Freedesktop SDK 24.08 (Flatpak runtime) 64

    bit - 2.31% (-3.98%)

    Fedora Linux 42 (KDE Plasma Desktop Edition)

    64 bit - 2.12% (+0.19%)

    Manjaro Linux 64 bit - 2.04% (-0.31%)

    Pop!_OS 22.04 LTS 64 bit - 1.93% (-0.04%)

    Fedora Linux 42 (Workstation Edition) 64 bit - 1.75% (-0.43%)

    Other - 18.04% (-4.28%)

  • sabertooth36@startrek.website
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    12 hours ago

    I’ve tried playing Steam games, but my hard drives are all NTFS and the Linux (Mint) partition is exFat, and it seems like they don’t play nicely together. Since i don’t want to move all my steam games to an exFat partition, I’m holding off on switching. But until I get around to overhauling my storage and go single drive, I’m gonna stick with Windows using as many FOSS apps as possible.

    • anugeshtu@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      I feel you. I have my old PC with quiet an “ancient” chipset. Installed an NVMe and installed Linux on it… Just to find out that my AHCI controller isn’t supported by it with all my Windows hard drives. It’s either booting that NVMe with the Linux one or booting the deprecated Windows ones from BIOS. 12-13 years of reliable hardware… :/ Hope there is a kernel patch supporting it again

    • Ganbat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      11 hours ago

      They can play nicely, it just requires some work. The NTFS-3G driver can map Windows users to Linux users and translate the permissions so that it basically Just Works™️ under both operating systems.

      Here’s some documentation. There are also tools you can use under both Windows and Linux to generate UserMapping files. I wish I could help more, but I did this a couple years ago and have forgotten the details since then

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        11 hours ago

        It causes a bunch of frequent issues though. I strongly encourage users to select exFAT rather than NTFS for sharing a drive between Windows and Linux.

    • Zink@programming.dev
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      11 hours ago

      When I switched over my home desktop to Mint, it was a very short time before I looked at Windows and said “I’m too old for this shit.” I mean, the reason I am a Mint fan in the first place is that I am a FOSS loving nerd but with a family and pets and hobbies and a career and a middle aged energy level. The decades I’ve spent fixing Windows based PCs is enough for a lifetime, thx.

      I say consolidate old files you want to keep. Shuffle them between drives as necessary to be able to format everything. Go all ext4 on the drives you already have. (once you’re ready)

      This is the way.

  • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    I wonder if Valve will ever release an official desktop version of SteamOS? I think Linux adoption would really increase fast if there was a gaming focused Linux desktop distribution with the support of an established company. But does Valve want that? A full featured operating system is a lot to maintain and provide support for.

    • magic_lobster_party@fedia.io
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      20 hours ago

      Is that really needed?

      I think what could really drive adoption is if computers with Linux pre-installed was more easily accessible. Just boot the computer, choose which DE you want to install and then it’s done. It doesn’t need to be SteamOS. Just any good distro will do.

      • Jankatarch@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        Strong agree.

        Everyone agrees chromeos is not THE best OS but you won’t see a single person dualboot windows on their personal chromebook.

        How google fucked up gentoo is another topic.

      • ObjectivityIncarnate@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Just boot the computer, choose which DE you want to install

        Yeah, that’s not at all accessible to the average consumer; they don’t know what a “DE” even is, much less why they should choose any over any other.

        Very, very few people want to deal with something other than a ‘just works’ situation.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          20 hours ago

          They don’t need to, just give them 3 screenshots and ask which they want. Show KDE, GNOME, and whatever the distro wants as the third. Maybe include some bullet points below each explaining what they are (pick one from the last two):

          • KDE - familiar, extensible
          • GNOME - modern, minimalist
          • Cinnamon/Budgie/MATE - something in the middle
          • XFCE/LXQT - super lightweight for older systems

          Maybe select one by default that the OEM likes, but showing the option helps nudge them toward the idea that this is a flexible system.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            18 hours ago

            Bazzite offers KDE or GNOME, and in the menu mentions KDE is what is used in SteamOS.

            I installed Bazzite on my HTPC recently. It was the worst install process I’ve seen in over ten years of using Linux. I shall enumerate the problems I had:

            1. The image is weirdly large, it’s like 9GB in size. It takes awhile to download and a weirdly long time to write to a USB stick.
            2. Once written, you boot the image, and GRUB has the options to Install Bazzite or Test Media And Install Bazzite. By default, Test Media is selected. It always fails this test.
            3. If you use the typical non-live environment image, the scaling is tiny on a 4k monitor, and there’s no way to adjust this.
            4. If you use the live environment image (in beta at time of writing), it might just lock up. I had that happen twice just while clicking through the Anaconda installer.
            5. The Anaconda installer, which I think they inherited from Fedora, was I think designed by one of the contrarian idiots who work for Gnome. There’s a DONE button up in the far upper left hand corner of the screen that sometimes acts as a back button, sometimes acts as a forward button. You have to move the mouse from the top corner of the screen to the center of the screen a lot, for no reason. The top-left corner of the screen is a dumb place to put a DONE button because most languages read top to bottom, left to right, the DONE button is where a START button should go.
            6. There isn’t a simple way to tell it “put / on this drive, put /home on that drive.” There’s an automatic installer which will do god knows what…fail, most likely. There’s a “custom” partition dialog which I couldn’t make heads or tails of, and then there’s a “custom advanced” one that lets you set the size and position of each partition to the byte. Doing it this way apparently REQUIRES you to not only set up a /boot/efi partition, but also a /boot partition separate from /root.
            7. If you’re in the habit of putting /, you know, operating system and software, on one drive, and /home on another drive, you have to learn from osmosis that part of Bazzite’s immutableness means that there is no /home, there’s a /var/home symlinked to /home.

            And if it doesn’t randomly lock up, you’ve got Bazzite installed!

            Bazzite markets itself as a newbie friendly Linux. They’ve got that configurator on their website that gives you a little Cosmo quiz about what system you have, what desktop you want etc. which is good! That is good user friendly design. But the actual software you get rattles like a Chrysler. How many noobs are going to bounce right off that?

            • LupertEverett@lemmy.world
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              3 hours ago

              You forgot the part where the installer fails just right before the end. Every time.

              Had this occuring on both my laptop and someone else’s that I was trying to install Bazzite to, which resulted in installing Fedora on their laptop instead (and back to EndeavourOS on my end), and even Fedora’s new installer errored out too. Thankfully the OS was working though.

              I am suspecting your 6th point for that one, which even if it wasn’t I consider it a colossal failure on their part because it is NOT TELEGRAPHED AT ALL. I shouldn’t have to stumble upon random forum posts to learn about it, come on.

              • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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                23 minutes ago

                I had one fail fairly early, giving me a cryptic message because apparently it couldn’t cope with how I’d set up the partitioning.

                I’ve had a Linux Mint install fail because it couldn’t cope with a BIOS setting, the error message gave a plain English explanation “it’s probably the XMBT (or whatever acronym) setting in the BIOS, see this page on the Ubuntu wiki for details:” and it gave a hyperlink, because the installer runs in a live environment, it had a copy of Firefox ready to go, AND it gave a QR code so you could easily open that link on a mobile device. THAT’S how it’s done.

            • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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              17 hours ago

              Bazzite is just a shit option vs using cachy. It’s the same goal and work load target. And bazzite manages to just be worse in every respect.

              • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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                17 hours ago

                Having played with it for a little while now that I’ve got it installed…I think it’s alright for a mostly or entirely gaming machine. I wouldn’t want to use it, or any immutable distro, as my main computer.

                I’ve attempted to stay out of the trendy distro of the month club, remember Garuda? Remember Peppermint? Remember Endeavour?

                • poolhelmetinstrument@lemmy.world
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                  5 hours ago

                  I switched to Bazzite as my daily driver and won’t be switching distros or going back to Windows.

                  I ran into an issue during install with my main drive previously having BitLocker. Had to clear the drive with a live USB installer. Had another issue with secondary LUKS drive auto-mounting, but was able to address it through the GUI.

                  Other than that it has been a magical experience. I do full-time work/school on the system.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              18 hours ago

              That’s really too bad. I’ve heard great things about Bazzite, and it’s what I recommend when someone wants SteamOS.

              That said, that’s a bit different from what I’m talking about. I’m suggesting OEMs ship a pre-installed Linux desktop, and users are presented an option on setup about which DE to use. So all that would change is enabling one and not the others, but they’d always be present. After install, you could switch between them if desired without messing with the package manager.

              I personally use openSUSE (leap on server, tumbleweed on desktop, Aeon Desktop on laptop), and their installer is solid, but I haven’t tried it on a 4k monitor (worked fine on 1440p). Unfortunately, I don’t recommend my distro of choice because it’s not popular enough to have a good newb support network, whereas that’s basically Bazzite’s core demographic.

              • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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                17 hours ago

                Stop recommending bazzite, just r commend cachy.

                It has a steam deck iso. It’s based on the same thing steamos is built on.

                Bazzite is literally the worse option and more likely to lead to problems.

                • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                  17 hours ago

                  I don’t recommend Arch forks as a rule, unless it has fantastic support from the maintainers (e.g. SteamOS curates updates). It’s going to by break eventually, and it’s going to require manual intervention (probably minimal), and users will get mad. Maybe it’ll be fine for 6 months or a year, but it will break eventually.

                  That’s much less likely with something built on Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, or OpenSUSE. Those all have solid testing and upgrade rules, unlike Arch, which is basically “works on my machine.” I used Arch for years until I got tired of the random breakage, and now I’m on Tumbleweed which has far less breakage and stays reasonably close to Arch package versions.

                  My first recommendation is either Linux Mint (I prefer Debian edition) or Fedora, because those have good new user experiences and aren’t super opinionated like Ubuntu.

          • magic_lobster_party@fedia.io
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            18 hours ago

            EndeavourOS has that kind of menu during the install process. A few screenshots and a brief explanation of each option.

            I thought it was nice. It’s something I want to see more with other distros. The DE is what most people will notice about the OS either way.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              18 hours ago

              Yeah, that is nice. I won’t recommend EndeavorOS or any other Arch installer/derivative for other reasons (IMO, every Arch user should do the official install process once or twice to have a better shot at fixing stuff later), but I do like that UX.

              I wish more distros did it. My distro (openSUSE) does something similar, but I also don’t recommend it because the community isn’t all that good for new users IMO.

              • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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                17 hours ago

                Your like 5+ years out of date with your preconceptions of arch.

                Arch at this point is breaks less from updates than most other options if your using a prebuild like endeavour or cachy.

                Fuck even the aur breaks shit less than windows breaks which is literally the bar for stability for your avg normies.

                • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                  16 hours ago

                  That tracks since I left Arch about 5 years ago, maybe a little longer, and I used it for at least 5 years.

                  I used it through the /usr merge which broke nearly everything, and for a few years of stability afterward. But even when it was super stable, there were still random issues a couple times each year. It wasn’t anything big (I’ve been a Linux user for 15 years or so), but it did require knowing what to do to fix it (usually documented clearly on the Arch homepage). This was especially true for Nvidia updates. After switching to openSUSE Tumbleweed, most of those went away, and even the Nvidia breakage seemed less frequent, and if something broke, I could easily snapper rollback and wait for a fix, whereas on Arch I had to fix things because going back wasn’t an option (I guess you could configure rollbacks if you had that foresight).

                  I just took a look, and it looks like manual intervention is still a thing. For example, the June 21 Linux firmware change required manual intervention. There were others over the last year, depending on the packages you use or your configuration.

                  That’s totally fine for Linux vets, but new users will have issues eventually. In don’t even recommend my distro, which solves most of those issues, because new user support isn’t there. The main reason I left was because I wanted to switch to btrfs (for snapshot rollbacks), and Tumbleweed had that OOTB so I gave it a shot.

          • someguy3@lemmy.world
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            15 hours ago

            I agree with the other guy, that’s too much choice. People don’t want to deal with it.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              15 hours ago

              Three options is too many? If one is already selected, you can just click through without thinking. Windows already does that stupid “setting up your PC” crap, and this would be far faster.

              • someguy3@lemmy.world
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                14 hours ago

                Yes.

                And they need to sort out the defaults to something good. 99% of basic users won’t/can’t change them.

                • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                  14 hours ago

                  Sure. If you have all three options be properly configured, it shouldn’t matter too much which you pick. The point is to make it apparent that you can change stuff, if you want.

      • Annoyed_🦀 @lemmy.zip
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        19 hours ago

        The issue with that is, people have no idea what these “choice” even mean. SteamOS is SteamOS, Windows 11 is Windows 11, MacOS is MacOS, but Linux is a big list. If pushing adoption is the key purpose, the manufacturer need to pick one that they believe is reliable and in active development. Just one. All these editions will very likely cause choice paralysis, which lead to people deem it as “too complicated”.

        Also Valve will not likely go that path again.

      • ampersandrew@lemmy.worldOP
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        20 hours ago

        Who else has an incentive to do so other than Valve? Even when you buy a pre-built with Windows today, those things are subsidized by bloatware that’s already installed on the machine.

      • The Picard Maneuver@piefed.world
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        18 hours ago

        Some companies sell Linux prebuilts, like System76, but that’s pretty niche for the average person to even know to search for.

        Now, if stores like Best Buy had a section for Linux prebuilts, that would reach a lot of people.

    • PanaX@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      I can attest that SteamOS does work on my rigs that are AMD gpu/cpu. It actually works great. I haven’t had one single issue. But I don’t do multiplayer games either.

    • LOGIC💣@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      I’d guess Valve wants whatever makes more games work on Linux so that their Steam Deck works better and is more compatible.

      And that means the most important thing is Linux desktop adoption by game developers so they make more native games. So somewhat ironically, I don’t think SteamOS would be as high a priority as other distributions, since it focuses on players instead of developers.

        • miss phant@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          15 hours ago

          A lot of games received their ports during the Steam Machine era, used outdated technologies like DirectX to OpenGL translation, and never got updated, so it’s not surprising unfortunately.