this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2025
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I know. I chalk it up to my use case (3D modeling & rendering w/ blender, Game Dev), which needs AMD's proprietary drivers, instead of the open source ones. Running them on Linux Mint probably doesn't help either, since it is, strictly speaking, not supported by AMD.
But pop os is not supported by amd either. I don't know that a distro based on Ubuntu would normally have issues supporting graphic drivers made for Ubuntu.
I find your situation all very confusing since if proprietary drivers are what you're trying to avoid, Nvidias situation there is far worse, which I've read 100 times and experienced myself. The only way I got any game working at all was with the proprietary drivers and even those would break things frequently. A game I ran last week now would fail to launch at all, stuff like that.
Until now I don't think I've ever heard of anyone saying anything positive about Nvidia on Linux.
I wouldn't say I try to avoid proprietary drivers. nVidia's worked well for me even better that open source, but amd's caused issues with my graphics even after reinstalling Mint without them. Now that I reinstalled them months later it works better... Who said the world wasn't magic anymore 😂✨
I guess what I initially tried to say is that it is worth to do some research on the supported distros for proprietary gpu drivers, should you need them to hopefully avoid freak accidents like this.
I too like to think that any ubuntu based distro should be okay running software for ubuntu, but when I messaged AMD's support they basically just tapped the your distro is not supported sign xD And I guess it makes sense, given that there could be critical differences between stock ubuntu and ubuntu based distros, too much to cover for a remote tech support.