this post was submitted on 03 Dec 2025
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If Linux adoption was something of a single season, some sort of growth Linux community had in the "early 2020" your argument would be valid: you had a steady growth on Linux's own name:
but this is not what is happening, Linux isn't growing on its own number, but on the number of the global PC gaming growth. New desktop/gaming PC are sold by default with Windows: it mean people don't "choose" Windows, they simply come with the stuff they bought. Windows 11 "growth" is mostly like that: it's not about a growth of users that willingly are choosing Windows. The very slow pace of decline of Windows 10 tell also that people is unwilling to buy into Microsoft experience... even if they are basically forced to: they also cannot chose Windows 10.
On the other side, every newcomers Linux userbase is an active and willing-fully choice: the fact that "new Windows 11" (aka: default new PC) is not restricting the Linux userbase which, on the contrary, is keeping up with the pace (no, it's not "thanks" to steam deck also: the SD's gpu stopped it's growth as you can see in the Steam HW survey). These are the key elements: