I am not bad with computers and have a beginner+, maybe intermediate level knowledge of Linux and I kept running into some problems here and there with different distros. Most claimed to work out of the box (which may be the case for some users, but I have a shit ass Nvidia 1060 and that was not at all the case, until I installed Nobara KDE/Nvidia.

Just came here to potentially save someone time, this shit is actually working out of the box, closest experience to this was with Arch, but that’s definitely not out of the box.

    • @Codilingus@sh.itjust.works
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      112 months ago

      I’ve distro hopped a decent amount over the years, and bazzite is easily the best fresh install and ready to game experience. I am all team red, though. Added bonus you no longer have to worry about updates or breaking things.

      • kib48
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        62 months ago

        Bazzite has an Nvidia image anyway so red, green, or blue team shouldn’t matter

      • @boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net
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        42 months ago

        I dont know if you really want to have a broken install until you switch XD ostree is just the single best way to manage Linux.

        I will write a bigger post about that, AMA

    • chingaderaOP
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      62 months ago

      Just read up on the included features, very cool, if I have issues, I’ll be trying this next.

  • @Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    Arch tends to be close, because it is a bleeding edge type of rolling update model, so any fixes would come to Arch faster than more LTS options.

    Some distros like Nobara liek you mention have it built in, Pop OS is another. Different distros will prioritize different aspects and that how itll fundamentally be.

    Linux is a game of knowing which distro fits your usecase, the less offending hardware you use, the easier the choices are. take for example those who use bleeding edge hardware might not like the out of the box experience on LTS based distros that take awhile to push something to kernel.

    • chingaderaOP
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      42 months ago

      Tried Pop, it was pretty good, but for some reason I just could not get helldiver’s to work well. Other OSs didn’t even let me get in the menus dx12 error, this is by far the least work and best result I’ve found.

      • @Mako_Bunny@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        22 months ago

        I got Helldivers to work by making it open in windowed mode rather than full screen, then making it full screen once it opened. Seems to be a common issue with it. someone on protonDB mentioned it iirc.

  • JJLinux
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    72 months ago

    PopOS is, in my opinion, the easiest distro to use to get Nvidia cards working without a sweat (as long as you install the Nvidia ISO). I don’t use PopOS anymore, been on Fedora now for almost 2 years, and have had 0 issues with my 3050 after installing the drivers, but it does take a bit of configuring to get there.

    • @CrabAndBroom@lemmy.ml
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      22 months ago

      Yeah IIRC with Pop!OS it just asks you if you have an Nvidia card during install, and then it takes care of it all for you. I run it on my desktop machine and have had no issues so far.

      Although word of caution, they’re supposed to be transitioning to the brand new COSMIC desktop environment sometime this year, so I don’t know if that will cause any instability.

      • JJLinux
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        22 months ago

        Those are wise words of caution. Anyone planning on getting or staying on PopOS should heed those words.

    • @alexsup21
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      22 months ago

      but it does take a bit of configuration to get there.

      Unfortunately, for most people that’s already too much…

  • Captain Aggravated
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    72 months ago

    I’ve had very good luck with Linux Mint and a GTX-1080. It does require opening the Driver Manager and clicking the button with “Recommended” next to it.

  • @kabi@lemm.ee
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    62 months ago

    Mint handled my 1060 really well and it’s really good on arch too with the newer driver. Still just running Xorg with cinnamon, though. I guess mileage still varies with this stuff.

    • Blxter
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      12 months ago

      For me fedora did not handle my 3080 well at all. Switched to mint and only real want is to upgrade Nvidia drivers to the 550 or whatever is the current best one. For me it is not available in the driver settings and not sure how else to get them…

  • Red_sun_in_the_sky
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    2 months ago

    I have an old lenovo laptop (notebook). I used to dual boot Ubuntu and later manjaro. I gamed on both albeit having not so strong graphics.

    I played classic shooters, open world games like saints row or gta iv, dark souls, NFS and more. They ran with lutris which is helpful with proton and wine. I would say games run pretty fine with these but one has to read on wine website or elsewhere to set up properly with some games.

    And again the harder games to set up are in my experience older games from 90s which were for win 98 or xp. Like captain claw.

    Overall I would say most flagship distros can run games after basic setup.

  • @Jotunn@lemmy.ml
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    42 months ago

    From my experience, it might be better to try gaming on a stable distro rather than a gaming distro to get a better feel for Linux first. Seems you already have some experience of that already, so here are the gaming distros I’ve tried and some thoughts about them. Keep in mind I’ve been using AMD stuff for my latest computers, but I do have an Nvidia laptop that I don’t game much on but often run the same distro on.

    Solous was the first gaming distro I’ve tried, might be close to ten years ago, so memory is kinda fuzzy. But it had support for most of the things you needed for gaming out of the box back then, which was rare. Development on it kinda went into a standstill or something, which made me go distro jumping.

    Manjaro was where I ended up. Most everything worked out of the box. I ran it for a long time, but there are some problems in how it’s being managed. The Arch but not Arch approach made it feel unstable sometimes. So when I made a new computer, I distro jumped again.

    Nobara which build on Fedora was much more stable than Manjaro had been for me. I had no real problems with it. Lots of patches and tweaks to make gaming a smoother experience build in. But I’ve stated eyeing the atomic OS that had been pooping up. The benefit of not having to run a custom-made updater every time you wanted to update made me do the latest jump.

    Bazzite is built on an atomic Fedora, so some settings and tweaks are a bit harder to do. But the benefit is that updates are automatic, and it comes with a lot of good tools and guides on how to work with an atomic OS. As a power user, you will have to familiarize yourself with containers to get full use of it. I’m not gonna lie, the out-of-the-box experience was a bit smother on Nobara, but I don’t really see me going back.

    Pop!_OS I’ve never really given it a good chance. I did try it for shorter periods, a couple of years apart. One time I just did not like its default windows manager and another it did not have support for my GPU.

    • chingaderaOP
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      22 months ago

      A ton of people recommended it, so I went ahead and installed it this morning, same if not better result than Nobara and just as easy to install.

      • impure9435
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        12 months ago

        You mean Bazzite? Yeah, it’s really great. Based on uBlue, which is actually based on Fedora’s Atomic spins. It’s very stable, secure and reliable, and pretty hard to mess up. Basically the closest thing to SteamOS that you can get.

  • @bastonia@lemmy.ml
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    22 months ago

    6 for gaming? There are only a few real serious Distros: Fedora, Opensuse, Debian, Ubuntu and MX/Mint/Arch(all in the same category). From what Ive seen there is only 1 serious distro: Nobara. That comes with Kernel Patches.

  • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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    22 months ago

    How dare you not use the same distro as me. Just kidding. Glad you found one that works for you. :)

  • @elxeno@lemm.ee
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    22 months ago

    1060 3gb here, worked fine on all distros i tried when i switched and hopped a little. Used mint, mx, debian, manjaro, artix, void and arch.

    • chingaderaOP
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      22 months ago

      I’m thinking this is where my lack of experience really shows, fixing some things, like audio issues was a bit rough for me on certain distros, or understanding how to install/remove drivers on certain distros. Out of the box is I think and important step for newcomers, but I also like being forced in a way to learn the environments a little more. It can be frustrating when you’re just ready to play something right now and haven’t resolved it.

      That said I celebrated as if I had just beat my first Dark souls boss, a lot of hype involved.

  • @nyctre@lemmy.world
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    12 months ago

    Seconding nobara. Garuda also worked out of the box for me and also mint. (Except that I had to force update the kernel for mint because some stuff wasn’t working with the recommended one)

  • @kuneho@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Honestly I never expect any system to work out-of-the-box, not even Windows.

    Most of the time if I see something JustWorks™ I suspect it is using some general ass drivers that may work, but with functions lost.

    Probably this isn’t the case anymore, but it still gives me a lot of work to verify everything is REALLY fine and dandy.

            • Possibly linux
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              12 months ago

              For one it does everything custom compared to stock

              It isn’t bad for a rescue system or a custom USB but I would not daily drive it and I would not recommend it over Linux Mint or Fedora

              • @NegativeLookBehind@lemmy.world
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                12 months ago

                I daily drive it just fine and I don’t really think your opinion is well informed. It sounds like you had trouble with some part of it and now you’ve written it off completely. But the numbers don’t lie- it’s a very popular distro and very stable.

                • Possibly linux
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                  12 months ago

                  I also don’t want a system with tons of junk installed. MX has to many tools to be useful and most of them aren’t even the best for the job not to mention its lack of systemd by default kind of sucks.

                  I really don’t get why it is better than Debian with xfce4