this post was submitted on 14 Feb 2026
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Linux Gaming
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Yet here I am. I have been using Ubuntu and Mint for several years on my dual boot systems. Installed CachyOS on my gaming rig yesterday because I would like to ditch Windows altogether.
First install failed because it didn't like using its own recommended btrfs. Tried again, used ext4, that worked. The system ran and I attempted to install some basic software that I currently use. VLC was easy enough, but I diidn't even manage to install the second software, Orca Slicer. I know that CachyOS is based on Arch and I cannot use apt anymore, but I have no clue what flatpak images are and how I install or use them.
I consider myself not to be the dumbest possible Windows user, and if I can't figure that stuff out within 10-15 minutes, I don't know how I'm supposed to spread the gospel. If you download a .exe installer and click "Next" a few times, you usually have the software you want ready to go. Why is that stuff so hard unless said software is some small thing that's been in the official repos for ages?
Ignore these guys. I'm on bazzite. I write kubernetes code in go/rust all day. IE a giant ass nerd Linux contributor.
Still a buggy mess. Bluetooth doesn't work oy motherboard, display doesn't work if I turn off the display, and I need to run scripts on boot to enable my audio on every boot.
Despite improvements from valve over the past few years, it's not ready for normies and these nerds will gaslight you all day.
You ain't dumb, this shit is a mess. Many times by design.
... Valve does not directly maintain or update or publish Bazzite.
Bazzite is an atomic version of Fedora, made by basically the Bazzite team... SteamOS, which is actually developed by Valve, is basically an atomic version of Arch.
Are you using Bazzite, or SteamOS?
Also: Display doesn't work if I turn off the display.
... what?
You... would you expect a thing to work if you turned it off?
Now, bluetooth not working on your mobo could be a legitimate driver compatibility issue, and it also sounds like you're having similar weirdness with your audio drivers.
What is your actual OS?
What is your actual mobo?
Bazzite is building off of the, maybe literally, billion dollars valve is pumping into the ecosystem.
As for the rest, you can't help me, driver issues. Which is the point.
Uh... I mean, kind of? Not really?
Bazzite makes significant use of Proton, which yes Valve primarily funds, though... probably more to the tune of millions to tens of millions, over its entire history so far, not... billions...
But as I said, its... mostly Fedora, with a good deal of prepackaged tweaks and prebuilt flatpaks and other systems they either manage or contribute to as a kind of functional ecosystem.
Fedora != Valve.
Anyway, I daily drive Bazzite.
I probably can help you, I've managed to fuck and unfuck myself by breaking and then fixing Bazzite more than once, by doing things they say you probably shouldn't do, and then using their provided wiki/tools/macros to fix things... and they've refined and improved their rollback command macros and such over the years.
But, you don't want to be helped, you want to complain, so, best of luck with that.
I would sooner commit sudoku than ever do anything Kubernetes, and yet shit basically just works for me. Nothing is perfect, but it's 5x better than Windows, so I'm never going back. It seems the server and desktop Linux experience doesn't quite transfer and apply that much between each other.
I'm not denying your experience to be clear. But for some people it really does work all well. Multi-monitor handling on KDE is so superior for me that I don't know how I ever dealt with whatever Windows was doing
The censorship is internalized
I thought they were just saying they'd rather solve puzzles ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
> But for some people
Yes a minority of them when specific hardware either though purchasing specific shit or dumb luck.
I can't even use my second monitor because they both break off I have DP and HDMI in use at the same time.
I will say I have one funny regression with my HDMI monitor where it sometimes goes blank for a bit when app goes full-screen on another monitor or right after wake-up. I laugh at this, because it's still a superior experience, and the kernel version that introduced this, fixed another quirk. Because the problem isn't with Linux here, but that this monitor has a broken ass firmware. And it resets itself after waking up from sleep or changing inputs, I had problems with this under Windows too, and other monitors don't do this. But I'm not going to point fingers at wrong direction, plus current state of things doesn't bother me. Same cannot be said about Windows, where another one of my monitors would randomly reset itself from time to time, which would cause the screen to remove itself from the system and cause the whole system to get 1-2 minute long aneurysm (hope you weren't gaming during that, especially a multiplayer game...). Meanwhile if that thing happens to this monitor on Linux, simply nothing happens and I don't even notice it.
Sooo maybe it's dumb luck that shit works better or just as well on Linux. But it's real. I didn't buy anything specifically for Linux, other than always sticking to AMD and avoiding NVIDIA, because I've long despised the latter. My whole system works great, the laptop I randomly purchases (AMD-based) works great, my parents' laptop works great, my grandma's computer works great, my work machine works great (well certainly much better than on Windows, though it's not a powerful machine), my friend-with-NVIDIA's computer works great (surprisingly), my other friend's computer works great (after figuring out how to install Arch; also with a broken monitor firmware suffering btw), his girlfriend's computer also works great.
Maybe it's actually dumb misfortune for those who have problems or some terribly obscure hardware. Maybe I live in some great lucky bubble where things work for the most part around me. Hard to tell which group is a majority and which isn't.
I do have the fingerprint reader on my laptop not working, that's unfortunate, but I forgot it's even a thing, since I never had one on another machine anyway. That same poor laptop got a bunch of 1-star reviews on the store's website for "poor work culture" just because Windows 11 at setup or idle would ramp up its fans to 100% for no reason, this never happens on Linux unless maybe I actually intentionally hammer it with something. It's crazy.
Okay one thing I'll have to admit, about one actual thing not working well, oh irony: my Steam Deck is the only device that has some huge problems with my Wi-Fi router. Just that device out of like 20 others. And just with that router. Drat. I'll have to see if the next major OpenWrt version will improve it.
Aaaaanyway, can you tell me more about the DP+HDMI problem? I'm actually somewhat curious. And what GPU do you have. I'm wondering if it's related to anything I've ever seen, or something else entirely.
It baffles me how a lot of people in the Linux bubble are simultaneously massive gatekeepers and annoyed when Windows people don't love Linux. A lot of replies to my comment is essentially "Well, this distro is not for noobs. Have you tried not being an idiot?" They don't realize how condescending and arrogant they sound. I didn't take computer science classes at university, and I shouldn't have to in order to be able to use an operating system that is not Windows, but doesn't take more time solving problems than doing the stuff that I actually purchased my hardware for.
I'm not annoyed that you don't love linux, I'm annoyed that you don't understand what words mean and think you have a higher level of relevant experience than you actually do, that you are going out of your way to feel insulted.
It points toward you being the kind of entitled and emotionally unstable person that people who actually are experienced with linux tend to have PTSD from consistently dealing with.
And your subsequent comment I am here replying to confirms it.
I didn't tell you to not be an idiot, I didn't call you dumb, I gave you the blueprint of a way to become a more experienced linux user, or a functional alternative to that.
Nobody in this thread called you dumb or an idiot, unless I somehow have someone who replied to you already blocked for some reason.
Your ego is too large, that is why 'linux people' don't like you; you're the arrogant entitled asshole who is unwilling to either learn or accept your own limitations.
Normally, in IT departments, acting the way you've acted would get you flagged or categorized as a more hostile or combatative client... here on lemmy, nobody is being paid to deal with your ego.
Yep. The community is its own worst enemy with usability. There was a discussion on how guis were terrible and shouldn't be needed. In 2026. Baffling.