• BlameTheAntifa@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Bazzite, Kubuntu, and Fedora are all great options for you. Bazzite can boot into a SteamOS-like dedicated gaming mode. If you want more flexibility over your system, Kubuntu or Fedora are both great choices. Since Proton works on all Linux flavors, there’s no need to wait. You can get the Windows-free gaming experience now.

      If you are completely new to Linux, try Kubuntu first. If you want your system to feel more game-centric, choose Bazzite. If you want a little more control and freedom over your system, choose Fedora.

      It’s hard to go wrong with Linux. The most impactful choice is your desktop environment (DTE), and all of the ones I mentioned use KDE Plasma 6+, which is fantastic. It’s like what Windows could be if Microsoft wasn’t so aggressively anti-UX.

    • شاهد على إبادة@lemm.ee
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      7 days ago

      Unless you specifically want Steam OS’s gaming mode, any Linux distro (Arch definitely) with KDE Plasma 6 will give you more or less the same experience. Not that I don’t think Valve should do so.

      • atlien51@lemm.ee
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        7 days ago

        With the same game comparability as steamos? Idk much about this stuff…

        • Decq@lemmy.world
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          7 days ago

          Bazzite is basically just Steam OS but support for more hardware. And easier to extend. You could drop it on your steam deck and if you don’t muck around in the terminal you probably wouldn’t know.

        • Luffy@lemmy.ml
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          7 days ago

          With the same game comparability as steamos?

          They all work with wine. Only for you I will spin up an image of AmongOS and Hannah Montana Linux with a flatpak of Lutris and play cyberpunk on there

          And I already know, it won’t change shit if its Debian 2, as long as a flatpak of lutris runs on it, it will have the same performance as with steam OS

          • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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            7 days ago

            it won’t change shit if its Debian 2

            So at best kernel 2.2.xx good luck with the hardware support. Flatpack is not a solution for everything.

        • _spiffy@lemmy.ca
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          7 days ago

          Pretty much. If it works for the steam deck it should work for the desktop. There are some exceptions for some brand new games. But if you want to wait a week or two for new releases usually it’s fine.

    • Decq@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Why wait for steam os? Bazzite and others already do everything steam os does and probably better and more.

      • omarfw@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        I agree but steam OS is going to be a hell of a lot more popular and have more support as a result.

        • Decq@lemmy.world
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          7 days ago

          Will it though? I love what Valve has done for the linux community. But didn’t they abandon Steam OS 2 too? Why will it be better this time? I feel like they would only give official support for handhelds/systems that are officially released with it.

          • omarfw@lemmy.world
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            7 days ago

            It’s normal for old versions of an OS to stop receiving support after a new version replaces it. That’s not unique to steam OS. if I install an old version of bazzite, or any deprecated Linux kernel, modern apps will not necessarily be made backwards compatible with it.

            But steam OS will have more installs than any other Linux variant just because of Valve’s brand recognition alone and the FOSS community will target it as their primary platform for software compatibility as a result.

            • SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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              7 days ago

              This is the big reason why I want to hop aboard an Arch SteamOS desktop train. If I ever have to wrangle with technical issues, or goddess forbid, the terminal, I want the documentation to be there to walk me through it. My first attempt at transitioning over to Linux Mint didn’t work out, since there were technical issues that got in the way of fully replacing Windows 11.

              Having reliable compatibility reduces the need for documentation, and a standardized platform for the documentation helps even more.

            • Decq@lemmy.world
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              7 days ago

              Its normal when there is a new release. But steam OS 2 was abandoned long before version 3 came around.

              • omarfw@lemmy.world
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                7 days ago

                What’s important right now is converting people away from windows. I expect Steam OS 3 to be much more beginner friendly than any other distro. If an average PC gamers first impression of linux is constant troubleshooting, they’re not going to try another kernel; they’re just going to go back to windows.

                Even if valve stops support later, they will have still introduced many people to linux in a beginner friendly way and wrestled the gaming ecosystem out of microsoft’s grip that much more.

      • CatDogL0ver@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Other Linux distro can’t compete with valve. Valve constantly updates their OS and drivers. There is no way other distro can compete.

        I have a steam deck. Valve releases updates almost once a month.

        • ArclightMat@lemmy.world
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          7 days ago

          Other distros have been competing forever. SteamOS is built on top of Arch, which updates multiple times per day. Valve pushes a lot of updates tied to the Steam experience, some of them are also shared with normal Linux desktops, so that makes it somewhat of a moot argument. I run normal Linux (Fedora Workstation) and play games with Steam, and they run the same as my Deck, even day 1 releases.

          Like, I get the appeal of a Valve-blessed Linux flavor, but as far as their stack goes, the Linux side of SteamOS is somewhat conservative (not many updates) and limited (due to read-only OS images) compared to normal Linux distros and the gaming side also gets pushed to all Linux distros. As a Steam Deck owner, I personally think Bazzite is more interesting for a real world gaming desktop usage than SteamOS, where you can’t even print documents because it lacks the required stack!

          To show how conservative it is, I call recall a few examples:

          • The desktop side, which runs the KDE Plasma desktop, was stuck on version 5.27 for ages and just got recently updated to 6.2. Meanwhile, Arch and Fedora/Bazzite are rocking Plasma 6.3 and should receive Plasma 6.4 in a month or so, pretty much day one.
          • The Linux kernel (although patched and tweaked) in SteamOS was still on 6.5 until a few days ago. It was bumped to 6.11 with SteamOS 3.7. Meanwhile, Arch and Fedora have been on 6.14 for weeks now, with new hardware support, performance fixes for existing hardware and some new features.
          • CatDogL0ver@lemmy.world
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            6 days ago

            Lots of people like don’t know much about Linux. We just want it simple and easy . SteamOS is mainly for Steam users who game only.

            I know some people use their SD like a PC. I have a handsome why people>don’t just built one. SD is so underpowered and not optimeised for regular users.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          7 days ago

          Arch releases updates every day (sometimes multiple times per day). Idk about Bazzite’s cadence, but I’m guessing it’s at least weekly, if not daily.