The fact that you have the best AMD GPU but are still not able to run it at native 1440p says a lot. You are running it at 75% of 1440p and than have it upscaled using FSR. It runs alright I would say but I don't think the performance really matches the visuals. It's clearly not well optimized.
Nilz
But also one of the worst options in terms of privacy.
Who wouldn't want to supervise themselves?
To clarify: native Linux support means the game ships with Linux binaries. For non-native games (Windows only) you use Proton. (For some games the Windows version with Proton actually works better than the Linux native version)
The setting you are referring to enables Proton for all games, instead of the selection of games that have a predefined Proton version which has been tested by Valve.
I'd prefer plain Arch over Arch-based since the latter will exclude you from receiving any support from Arch forums.
I'm not trying to say nuclear is the definitive solution, but it's certainly a step in the right direction. Progress is progress, we don't have to find the final solution in one go.
It's a shame we aren't seemingly taking them into consideration in the whole energy transition crisis we are in.
But rather let's just keep sending people into hazardous coal mines while ignoring nuclear energy until the solution to all our problems magically comes to us.
This indeed. To OP: if you use LXC containers using templates that Proxmox provides, they are headless by default. A Gui is a waste of resources.
Factorio is a pretty demanding game as long as you play long enough
This is actually everyone's complaint about the game. It's frustrating because the game has a lot of potential otherwise.
I would rather use an AMD graphics card over Nvidia on Linux, because of Nvidia's attitude towards Linux. Other than that there's not much to say I think, it's usually the tiny details that are missing from product pages that can make an impact. There's no mention of which wireless networking chip it uses for example.
That being said. Chances are really low you'll run into any hardware that doesn't work immediately without any drivers and if you do manage to run into issues, there are often workarounds. I've installed Linux on many devices, mostly laptops, and I've never had real problems.
Why? The fact that people are buying it now that it is on Steam already gives the message they didn't want to buy it when it was an Epic exclusive. If people don't buy it on Steam after it's available then it doesn't encourage devs/publishers to release on Steam at all either.