46 points

Can’t believe Valve pulled it off, honestly. Multi-year project to make Linux gaming a reality and then they launched it and not only did everyone love it, but they still love it. Honeymoon phase has worn off and people are still down with the Steam Deck. Even normies like it, not just Linux nerds.

permalink
report
reply
13 points

My steam deck is still regularly used. I can’t say the same for my switch.

It’s just so versatile in what it can do, since it’s a PC at its core.

And being able to play a vast majority of my library, then pick it up later on my main PC if I wish is a huge bonus.

I love relaxing on my couch and still being able to play.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points
*

Plus there’s barely a reason to use a switch with how well yuzu runs. And come steamOS 3.5 and its SMT fix, yuzu will run even better.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

I haven’t really used Yuzu, mostly because I don’t know where to get switch games nowadays.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points
*
Deleted by creator
permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

I’d say if you intend to use it as a portable PC (as in, bringing a keyboard and mouse, or even using it with an external monitor as well), then it can play simcity or civ well.

If you’re intending to just use it as a handheld, then no, the Witcher 3 would be a better style of game for it. Touchscreen just isn’t the same for a mouse-heavy game.

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points

The Steam Deck encouraged me to finally dual boot with Linux, specifically Nobara os.

Rarely use windows nowadays, for those few games that don’t run on Linux yet.

permalink
report
parent
reply
10 points

I got my steam deck back in May of last year. It’s held up really well and it’s been my primary gaming device. It’s basically gotten me back into gaming.

permalink
report
reply
4 points

Is it possible yet for me to swap fully to linux if 99% of what I do on my PC is games? The only desktop app I use is photoshop but as long as there’s a decent replacement not a real deal breaker.

permalink
report
reply
4 points

There’s GIMP, which fills the same niche as Photoshop but takes a long time to get used to.

I used to run CS6 with minor issues in wine. Both Photoshop and wine have come a long way since then I’m sure, I’m curiousv what the experience is like now

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points
*

Nobara OS takes care of most setup. The few games that don’t run on Linux yet are ones with anticheat that don’t support Linux (Valorant and R6S are the biggest iirc); you’d probably get banned or something if you tried to run those on Linux right now.

Gimp is great as a photoshop substitute, but takes alot of getting used to cuz the UI is just not as good imo. Most other productivity software either support Linux already (obs, blender etc), or there are equivalent or superior alternatives (like davinci and krita instead of premiere and clip studio).

You can run Photoshop through a VM though, and actually get pretty similar performance.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points
*

Thanks for the recommendation, looks good. I guess I have one more qualm too; what’s like the track record for smaller distros like this? I figure stuff like Linux mint and debian have a pretty good track record for updates; what’s it like for something like Nobara? Will I be able to run it for a few years without fear of updates just stopping one day and my os just goes defunct? Thanks!

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points

I’m considering installing ChimeraOS on my living room HTPC

permalink
report
reply
3 points
*

If not for HDR support on Linux, I’d run it for gaming too. As it stands, it’s a dual boot/vm for productivity, and win for gaming. Hopefully soon.

permalink
report
reply
5 points

Kde is taking steps to support HDR, so that’s good

permalink
report
parent
reply

Linux Furs

!linuxfurs@pawb.social

Create post

A place for all Furries who use (or are interested in) Linux-based OS’s to come, hang out, ask questions, and enjoy!

Community stats

  • 34

    Monthly active users

  • 62

    Posts

  • 279

    Comments

Community moderators