From my limited research and understanding, Nvidia makes Linux drivers, but they’re closed source. These work fine. They open sourced some stuff but not enough to really change much yet.

There are also FOSS drivers, but the performance for those vary.

Is this correct? Should I stick to proprietary drivers if I want consistent performance?

  • GoebbelsDeezNuts [any]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    In my experience it's a bunch of testing a bunch of different configurations, games, and prayers trying to get different games to run and ultimately getting frustrated and going back to windows.

    For a while I was dual booting using Linux to run games that run without issue natively, and Windows for a bunch of the multiplayer stuff I couldn't run on Linux. Ultimately I gave on Linux tho. I know I know.

    • SuperZutsuki [they/them, any]
      ·
      1 year ago

      These days if you mainly use steam it's super easy. The only game I've had issues with is Elden Ring and that was because of EAC. It's probably fixed now but I haven't played since last year. Just had to mess with the files a bit and play offline.

      • PorkrollPosadist [he/him, they/them]
        ·
        1 year ago

        In general, anti-cheat software is always a show stopper. There are a small handful of exceptions, growing mainly due publishers trying to get their games working on Steam Deck. Most of the time, this incompatibility is employed as deliberate anti-competitive corporate practice. Some anti-cheat vendors like EAC have made moves towards Linux compatibility, but publishers must opt-in and most refuse even when the option is on the table.

        I've become much less of a GNU zealot over the years, but anti-cheat software makes me go full Stallman. These things are just rootkits. They do nothing but cause inconvenience to the end user, just so some child gambling company masquerading as a game studio can cut operating expenses for their massive cash-cow gaming platforms.

        • SuperZutsuki [they/them, any]
          ·
          1 year ago

          Yeah, I hate that shit. Thankfully, I trained my brain to hate non co-op multiplayer games. Anything competitive gets like 2 days max and then I delete it and play more Monster Hunter or something single-player. I think Splatoon 2 was the last competitive game I played for double digit hours.

      • GoebbelsDeezNuts [any]
        ·
        1 year ago

        Yeah unfortunately my friends seem to only want to play games that won't run on Linux.

        I could stop playing Valorant and Tarkov with them but then I'd just never talk to them :bawllin-sad: