Hello, everybody! I want to have a little mini-PC for gaming that operates like a console. I don’t want to have a big, clunky case in the back or front of the TV. Furthermore, I don’t play many AAA titles from recent years, so the hardware doesn’t need to be high-end. It would be nice if I could run Scarlet Nexus, Nier: Automata, and Horizon Zero Dawn at a stable 60 FPS. The graphics don’t need to be extreme; I just want to enjoy the game.

Also recommend some great distro’s for gaming.

2 points

Not sure about Mini-PCs, but Nobara is a great distro for gaming. It has everything set up and great defaults for gaming, I’ve been using it for the past ~2 months.

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1 point

Have you tried Chimera?

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1 point

No, but that’s more of a distro for a console-like experience, it’s not intended to be used on desktop PCs.

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1 point
*

Yes it is. It’s a distro specifically designed for gaming. So if you’re just gaming and nothing else, that’s probably the best one.

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47 points

Steam Deck is my recommendation. If you want to use it with your TV, grab a dock, and Bluetooth controller (Sony Dualsense works great). Bonus: Runs Linux out of the box. Double bonus: Actually remotely affordable, unlike a high-end gaming rig.

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8 points

Cannot recommend steam deck enough. Full-on console experience with your entire steam library. Proper PS/Xbox controller support as well as M/K. Can boot into Linux directly for tweaks. They also just started selling refurbished devices with full warranty.

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8 points

Fully recommend a Steam Deck as well. Only difference is that I can’t recommend a Bluetooth controller since it can’t wake it due to a Bluetooth limitation. If you use a USB dongle controller it can wake it. Unfortunately the Xbox wireless controller adapter is not officially supported, and you need to install the drivers manually (and after each update to the Steam Deck). I’m sure there are good options out there for USB dongle controllers, but I have just been doing the Xbox controller driver install, so I haven’t looked for them.

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1 point

it can’t wake it due to a Bluetooth limitation.

That’s a great point. I’ll have to think about a good solution there (it’s Linux, so, should be able to do it). It is probably an OS level think like a udev script. The only requirement SHOULD be that the controller acts in HID mode as that shouldn’t need the whole stack, to my knowledge.

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1 point

I think it’s a hardware problem. The Deck doesn’t have its bluetooth radio connected to a low power embedded controller capable of issuing a wakeup. You could tell Linux to keep enough hardware awake to properly listen on the Bluetooth radio, but that would be disastrous for sleep life.

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1 point

Only difference is that I can’t recommend a Bluetooth controller since it can’t wake it due to a Bluetooth limitation.

Difference from what?

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2 points

Difference from the recommendation of the person I responded to. They recommended Steam Deck + Bluetooth controller. I recommend Steam Deck + USB receiver controller.

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4 points

I heard Minisforum does some cool stuff with mini PCs. Might be worth to look into

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3 points

I have one and it’s very nice.

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4 points

I’d say a bee-link, a SER7 or GTR7, check their specs https://www.bee-link.com/catalog/product/index?id=485

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7 points
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I would recommend to get a Fujitsu esprimo small form factor pc or a lenovo sff with an i5 6500 cpu. They sell used for less that 100 euros. Get a half size gpu (gtx 1650 or 1050 ti or amd rx 6400). And you will have a perfect pc for gaining in 1080p in your living room on the cheap. Those pcs are a good compromise for speed and size, any smaller and they will get way too hot. Also these are well build office PCs, that will run very quiet.

I would recommend pop_os as a distro. Its made for gaining and I use it as my daily driver.

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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).

Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word “Linux” in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.

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