• barnaclebutt@lemmy.world
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    53 minutes ago

    Which I’m sure is much higher than windows games working on windows. Proton is awesome for old games.

  • Deestan@lemmy.world
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    4 minutes ago

    The stereotype is of the haughty Linux user, but fuck me all I ever see in these discussions is Windows users being belittling assholes.

  • Rose56@lemmy.zip
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    36 minutes ago

    Playing Hogwarts legacy at the moment, but I also tested ETS 2 and the tenants.

  • orosus@lemmy.world
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    41 minutes ago

    The only game I am not able to make it work on Linux is “The Sims 4”. After installing it on Steam, when clicking on Play, it runs the EA app in the background and tries to start the game, but it doesn’t load. Any suggestion?

    • dangrousperson@feddit.org
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      3 minutes ago

      always check protonDB:

      https://www.protondb.com/app/1222670

      Looks like most people are using GloriousEggroll’s version of Proton (ProtonGE) and some are using launch options to disable the EA Launcher.

      GE works on Wine at Red Hat and is thus very knowledgeable about windows translations and the stuff he changes about Valves Proton are often merged down the line, its like an unofficial beta release and I’ve had good a experience with Hus proton Versions.

      That said, to actually get custom Proton Versions I use “ProtonUp-Qt”(available as flatpak): https://davidotek.github.io/protonup-qt/

      Which downloads different Proton Versions and manages them for you. You can then set the default for all games in the steam settings, or on a game-by-game basis

  • xytaruka@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Switching to linux had me cold turkey league of legends im a healthier happier person now.

    • sibachian@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      the real cold turkey was Riot killing linux support last year. Seems like there wasn’t enough linux players at the time for them to walk back that decision.

  • python@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    I finally switched to Linux just a few days ago when upgrading my laptop’s SSD, and so far I have only opened minecraft to see how it runs - extremely smoothly, even though I could not figure out how to make use the Nvidia GPU. I’d say it runs noticeably better on Linux than it did on Windows.

    • SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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      2 hours ago

      Oh, yeah? I have a super niche German adventure game from 2004 that I can’t get up and running. But then it also won’t work on at least Win7 and up (I tried). I can’t even get that running on an XP virtual machine. This game has become my nemesis.

      • Deestan@lemmy.world
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        18 minutes ago

        See if you can trick Ross Scott into playing it. :) He has near infinite patience for forcing old games to run, and a skilled network to lean on.

  • kinther@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    The only games I’ve struggled with are those with codecs that are not distributed with Proton. Installing GE-Proton solved it.

    99.99% of games on Linux unlocked.

      • Electricd@lemmybefree.net
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        16 minutes ago

        From their readme:

        Things it contains that Valve’s Proton does not:

        • Additional media foundation patches for better video playback support
        • AMD FSR patches added directly to fullscreen hack that can be toggled with WINE_FULLSCREEN_FSR=1
        • FSR Fake resolution patch details here
        • Nvidia CUDA support for PhysX and NVAPI
        • Raw input mouse support
        • ‘protonfixes’ system – this is an automated system that applies per-game fixes (such as winetricks, envvars, EAC workarounds, overrides, etc).
        • Various upstream WINE patches backported
        • Various wine-staging patches applied as they become needed
        • NTSync enablement if the kernel supports it.
  • lustrate@lemmy.zip
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    8 hours ago

    Unfortunately those pesky live service games that have the most player counts are disproportionately represented in that 10%.

    • Rothe@piefed.social
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      37 minutes ago

      The correlation between people playing those games and not giving a fuck about digital privacy is probably huge.

    • cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3 hours ago

      They tend to require installing a rootkit on your own computer. I wouldn’t buy them even if they did support Linux.

    • thelittleblackbird@lemmy.world
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      41 minutes ago

      Ummmm sure?

      I don’t want to start that extremely old flame war of native VS jit code but…

      Proton is not an emulation, it is a translation to native code, and while it has some drawbacks (more memory usage, more time at start up to compile things) it can unlocks a lot of potential when the hw support new capabilities, this is the reason that some dx10 games run faster on Linux…

      • KubeRoot@discuss.tchncs.de
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        30 minutes ago

        I might be wrong, but I don’t think proton is either? It’s running x86 instructions either way, wine just provides a way to load it from the windows executable and library formats, and together with proton they provide implementations of windows libraries for those executables to use.

    • rhabarba@feddit.org
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      8 hours ago

      IBM killed OS/2, because they hate end users. IBM has a long history of making great end user products (awesome keyboards, great laptops, still good software) only to sell them to the highest bidder. All IBM execs can see are penguins with suitcases full of dollar bills. OS/2? End users loved it, but it didn’t run on mainframes. Killed. The Model M keyboard? End users loved it, but it was too durable, so it did not guarantee many sold units (because why would anyone buy a new Model M while the old one is still good?) -> rebranded as Unicomp and left to rot. (Typing this on a Unicomp PC122, but that’s a different story.) Thinkpads? Ah well, those are expensive. And they aren’t mainframes. Sold to the Chinese because ugh! End users! Lotus (SmartSuite, Notes)? Nice to have, but nope, too many end users. Ugh! End users!

    • aGlassDarkly@piefed.zip
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      5 hours ago

      This may be the first time I haven’t fallen into the subset of “everybody.”

      Everything I want to play runs using Linux/proton. It seems like the only things that have trouble are things I’d never consider even installing, let alone running.

      • Electricd@lemmybefree.net
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        10 minutes ago

        You’re the exception

        Most people play the same 3 FPS games that don’t run on Linux. They’re probably not the type of people that would use Linux but hey, some might

      • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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        3 hours ago

        I was watching a video about extraction shooters and it mentioned a F2P Chinese one. I wasn’t that interested in it, but I wanted to give it a try to see what it was doing differently. It didn’t run though, because almost all Chinese games have kernel-level AC. I figure it’s not a big loss. I own EfT, and I’ve got other extraction shooters to play, especially ARC Raiders now.

        That was the last time, and the only time in a very long time, that a game I tried to play didn’t just work.

        • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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          55 minutes ago

          ARC Raiders is what I’d be playing even on Windows.

          An extraction shooter where there is a common enemy creates a lot of spontaneous cooperation. People are still dangerous, but seeing a person isn’t a life or death situation like in EfT.

        • aGlassDarkly@piefed.zip
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          55 minutes ago

          kernel-level AC

          This sounds like they did you a solid by not working. I’ll have to look up this genre of shooter, though; not something I’ve heard of before. I tend to be too easily annoyed for anything that isn’t single-player or local co-op these days, although some part of me still remembers some MMOs though rose-colored nostalgia glasses.

  • Shayeta@feddit.org
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    8 hours ago

    Impressive, now tell me what % of the top 20 current concurrent players games run on linux.

        • dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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          5 hours ago

          Yeah, sorry.

          Medals are probably the best metric. Besides red for broken, they go

          • bronze for barely playable with lots of tinkering
          • silver for playable with tinkering
          • gold for working great with some tinkering
          • platinum for works out of the box with no tinkering

          And above that “native”, which I think is not included in the charts. Even native games you can still opt to play through proton though. I had better performance playing Slay the Spire and Project Zomboid on older gfx with Proton than native for example.

    • 0ops@piefed.zip
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      6 hours ago

      I’ve heard that there’s some older windows games that don’t run in newer versions of Windows but do run in proton

    • Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 hours ago

      True, but getting us privacy-concious folks to use any version of windows, even the most palatable (Enterprise IOT LTSC, which is impossible for an individual to acquire through official channels) is a hard sell. I’m still only using Win10 IOT LTSC for VR game support, but I’m just biding my time. Already switched all of my other devices off windows.

    • flying_gel@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Not necessarily, steam includes a windows compatibility layer making many windows games playable on Linux and that’s how most steam deck games run. On stream deck specifically the battery life and performance is often better under this translation layer than installing windows and running them natively.

      Edit: Just skimmed the article, this is exactly what it’s about.

      • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        8 hours ago

        I think its more that you stated the obvious. Like saying 100% of Linux Appimages run on Linux. The reason to move from Windows, or one of them, is MS using telemetry and screen capture and other bloat that ruins the gamiglng experience due to processing power needed, you move that to a Linux machine and there’s no background garbage running.

        For example my machine had dual boot, at idle windows was using 6% of processing power to do nothing. On Linux it was 0 to .5% to idle.

        With windows updates I have to delete Ai.exe and Ai.DLL from the office folders or randomly ai starts hogging resources even if I have no office apps in use. Just a terrible user experience.

        • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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          3 hours ago

          They stated the obvious, which didn’t add to the conversation, and also was wrong. There are a number of older games that just do not work on modern Windows. Frequently they work through WINE/Proton just fine though.

        • FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au
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          2 hours ago

          at idle windows was using 6% of processing power to do nothing.

          You think it’s doing nothing, but it definitely is doing something. Windows just does more stuff than Linux. For all you know it’s rebuilding indexes to make the whole PC run better.

          tated the obvious, which