this post was submitted on 29 Oct 2025
78 points (95.3% liked)
PeerTube
549 readers
1 users here now

PeerTube is a tool for sharing online videos developed by Framasoft, a french non-profit.
Rules
- Only posts about PeerTube.
- Be nice.
For videos from PeerTube, check out !peertube@lemmy.world
Resources
- Official website
- Documentation
- Forum
- FAQ
- Sepia Search (Search engine)
founded 9 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Why? The Nvidia drivers work fine for modern games.
There is a problem with LTS distros like Ubuntu and Mint etc. that don't have fully up to date Linux kernels and thus can't provide the latest Nvida drivers, but on more regularly updated distributions like Fedora I never had any issues with running games on Nvidia.
That said, AMD GPUs generally work nicer on Linux, but having a Nvidia card shouldn't hold you back from upgrading to Linux.
The performance hit in my testing was fairly signficant. I saw improvements with different versions of Proton, but ultimately I was looking at a 5-20% reduction in performance vs my testing in Windows 11 when playing more demanding titles. There were also frustrating anomalies where games would randomly refuse to start or would crash. Yes, you can certainly use an Nvidia GPU and get decent performance out of older titles, but there are still some fairly significant concessions that need to be addressed. This is well documented among the community.
So you get 100 instead of 120 fps? Seems fairly irrelevant to me 🤷
Anyways, if that is the level of difference we are talking about, then you will not fare much better with an AMD gpu.
Except when I push a game and target 60 FPS, while dealing with stuttering and really bad frame times that I can't reproduce in Windows.