Gaming on Linux - Worth the Hassle?

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Hello there! In the last couple of months, I've started to get more serious with my development career. One of the big things I finally had to do three months ago was to abandon Windows because I was starting to outgrow it, and a Linux virtual machine wasn't cutting it anymore. As the Linux kids say, I had to go bare-metal to get to the next level of my skills.

With that came the necessity to adapt to an entirely new environment (which wasn't as hard as I expected it to be) and to start migrating to completely new apps and new ways of doing things that were unrelated to work as well.

Yes, I do have dual-boot to Windows. Still, it is a hassle to go back and forth to do basic things. If you're going to move, you have to move entirely, right?

One of the things that remained a mystery to me was Linux gaming. We all have heard how painful it is at one point or another if you browse gaming forums, and I have to say that, yes, compared to Windows, where you click install and open your game and play.

Linux gaming requires a lot more work depending on what you want to do, but it is not strictly impossible to game on Linux. In fact, after you get it going, as long as it is on Steam, you might have a pretty decent and hassle-free experience.


One tool you will want to get yourself acquainted with is Proton; this tool will be your bread and butter for playing games on Steam.

ProtonDB

Proton comes pre-installed when you install Steam on Linux, and it will be your guide to what games you can play on Linux.

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On ProtonDB, you'll be able to see games that are part of the Steam library on Steam, and they will have a couple of categories that will easily tell you if the game is playable or not on Linux. These are the categories:

Native

If a game has the native category, it means that it can run natively on Linux and that it should be as simple as clicking install and launching after the setup is over to be able to play.

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Platinum

If a game is of platinum quality, it is playable out of the box with no issues using the Proton emulator with Steam. It should be as simple as Native, install, and play.

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Gold

Here is where it starts to get shaky. If a game has gold, it will be playable, but you need to apply specific tweaks—most of the time, it's either audio issues or graphical issues that can be solved with launch commands.

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Silver

Silver is where it gets ugly, you will need to tweak the game settings heavily, and you will probably find crashes every couple of hours. You might be able to finish the game, or you might not.

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Bronze

Like silver but worse.

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Borked

It won't even launch, or it will launch to a black screen.

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If you want to play a game outside Steam, well, that is a different beast that needs to be tamed on another post because they all need to be handled on a case per case basis, most likely thru Lutris if you're lucky or thru other harder for the average user methods.

Is this kind of content interesting for the gaming community? I can keep writing quite a bit of it if people are interested in learning more about gaming on Linux :-)



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8 comments
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It's never stricken me to try Linux. It looks great and I've heard great things but being mainly a gamer by heart I don't think it would suit me well. Looks like I would have to jump through a few to many hoops just to get things working and I dont want that. I hope you can get some games in though! Enjoy!

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Yeah I wouldn't recommend jumping into Linux from Windows if you don't need it for work.

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Proton works great! I discovered it when I got steam a month ago and wanted to start playing game. So far, my experience has been smooth and no issues. I played some games marked silver and no issues. Make sure to also read the report too. As I often found, and I assume the problem could be with the environment and nvdia drivor cause it often broke and seems incompatible with linux.

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Yeah - the reports are pretty useful when something is broken I haven't tried to play anything below gold yet but I'll try it soon.

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I am not a gamer; however I would say the following:

The graphical games of yesteryear were optimized for Windows. However, I suspect that the future of gaming will be driven by the machine's ability to interact with networks and blockchains. Linux does a much better job at interacting with networks than windows. So, I expect to see dedicated gamers moving to linux for the networking abilities.

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I've been spending a massive amount of time messing with Linux lately, now that I'm a validator operator for the WhisperNode team in the Cosmos ecosystem.

It's well worth learning, and unlocks an entirely new world of capabilities when it comes to operating systems and what you can do with them.

I still run Windows 11 on my daily driver, but sitting in a terminal all day, Linux is now second nature to me.

Thanks for sharing this guide; gaming on Linux has always been something people thought wasn't possible/wasn't optimal, but if you know what you're doing, you can really crank out some gaming action on an incredibly optimized system, and make great use of the extra resources saved by running a lighter weight desktop environment!

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Hey there! It's been a while! Yeah Linux is a great tool to know if your job is anything related to do with computers. I upgraded my dual boot to Windows 11 a couple of months ago and haven't really used it yet.

Linux is also a must if you want to operate any sort of node related for crypto as you mentioned.

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It has been a while my man! Hope all is well on your end - looks like you're crushing it in the Hive game. I'm hella sad I dumped my stake last year now :[

And yeah, 100% necessary! I'm actually going to start sharing guides/command snippets/etc for those interested in tinkering with validators and learning how it all works :D

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