this post was submitted on 08 Jun 2023
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Hey folks!

Thinking of switching back to Linux. I was running PopOS about 1.5 years ago and was pretty happy with the gaming aspect of things, but I was playing a lot of VALORANT back then, and I got sick of dual booting. That is less the case now, so I would like to try going back to Linux for the majority of my gaming / streaming setup, and just use Windows for the handful of games like Destiny 2 that won't run on Linux.

I am fairly new to Linux. Don't mind learning some terminal stuff, but I am basically a noob so it does need to be pretty easy to start with. Got a NVIDIA 3080 and AMD CPU if that matters at all.

Recommend me a distro please fellow penguin gamers.

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[–] Skooshjones@vlemmy.net 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Pop_OS is good, I've been using it for a bit on my laptop. On my main gaming computer, I have been using Nobara for over a year and it's been great. Very stable, only a few small bugs. Games run great on it and it's optimized for gaming specifically. It's part of the Fedora family and developed by the same person who created the Glorius Eggroll version of Proton for Linux.

If you want to stick with something more fully mainstream, then Fedora Vanilla is fantastic also. Just know that the default Wayland desktop will be a little buggy depending on the game/app. I still use X11 personally and will stick with it for another year or so while Wayland gets a bit more ironed out.

Overall, you won't go wrong with Pop_OS or Fedora for mainstream Distros. If you want a little more freedom and customization, go with Fedora and their Plasma desktop version. If you want something a little more power-user but still very friendly and slightly more optimized for pure gaming, Nobara with the Plasma desktop.

If you want total no muss/fuss vanilla, plug n' play, go with Pop_OS.

Links for you:

Fedora KDE Plasma - https://spins.fedoraproject.org/kde/ Nobara All versions - https://nobaraproject.org/download-nobara/ Pop_OS - You already know it lol.

Good luck and welcome back to the full Linux experience!

[–] dj3hac@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Keep in mind that Nobara uses Wayland by default and you will have some issues with streaming. Nothing you can't configure and work around, it's just Wayland has some privacy "features" that prevents apps from listening to each other unless you give them explicit permission.

[–] Skooshjones@vlemmy.net 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yeah, that's why I mentioned switching over to X11. Wayland is so close, but just a little too buggy still for me. I am planning on switching to Wayland 100% at the end of this year.

By then it should be where I'm comfortable with.

[–] dj3hac@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I stuck with Wayland because literally streaming is the only thing that's screwy for me, it still largely works. I have 4 monitors and x11 don't like that so much..

[–] Skooshjones@vlemmy.net 1 points 1 year ago