update: March 29th: i can play it now👌
in my case its been a very smooth experience but it really feels like a coin toss if it works for someone or notYmir wrote: 2z2l6t
Now that I think about it, I've probably asked "what's the point of linux" a couple times, and have had it explained to me every single time.
I'd probably just try it out for the sake of trying it out if I had a spare device, but it seems somewhat inconvenient to use (many things being uned, setup). Not sure if that's a meme or if that's reality, but that's always the impression I've gotten out of Linux.
I'm late and I only saw this because I was bored and came here.Ymir wrote: 2z2l6t
What's the point of using Linux unless you're a developer or something? Genuinely curious because so far it looks a bit inconvenient to use.
I personally disagree. Linux gaming is something that can be done without much hassle. ProtonDB reports that among the top 1000 Steam games, 81% have a gold medal (running more or less out of the box) or higher. On Steam, I can pick most games and they will run without much hassle. The top seller game right now on Steam, Schedule I, runs OOTB on Steam.Zeunig wrote: 5k5m4d
it's good if you don't want to play games (or if u only want to play osu) it's so much faster than windowsYmir wrote: 2z2l6t
What's the point of using Linux unless you're a developer or something? Genuinely curious because so far it looks a bit inconvenient to use.
Why would Linux benefit from FPS? Everyone tolerated inconsistent higher-latency cursors on Wayland for years because Xorg bad or whatever :pgreat_elmo wrote: 6o1l6a
Any fps because they are scared of penguins (anticheat):- Marco - wrote: 6a4s1t
tbh nowadays lots of games runs on GNU/Linux, the ones that don't are those with anticheat
Not ALL. Which absolutely sucks on my end.