Linux user share on Steam breaks 2% thanks to Steam Deck
Linux user share on Steam breaks 2% thanks to Steam Deck

Linux user share on Steam breaks 2% thanks to Steam Deck

Linux user share on Steam breaks 2% thanks to Steam Deck
Linux user share on Steam breaks 2% thanks to Steam Deck
I, for one, welcome our new penguin overlords.
We are at the point where the gas paddle is pressed to the floor and the engine is roaring but the turbo hasn’t spooked up fully yet and kicked in so we are righhtttt about to get punched in the face by another level of torque and acceleration of Linux growth.
Let’s gooooo!!!
P.S. is PopOS! still the popular choice for desktop gaming? Looking for a more permanent alternative to Windows. I’m currently leaning toward openSUSE + Plasma 6, since I’ve fallen out of love with Ubuntu/Canonical pretty hard. I know Pop is Ubuntu-based, but… I’d rather not have to build up from something like Arch.
Like others have said, use fedora. But use the nobara flavour of fedora, as its built from the ground up for gaming and fixes a lot of tricky edge cases before mainline does.
is PopOS! still the popular choice for desktop gaming?
Pop!_OS was pretty good for two reasons:
But, the Linux landscape is always on the move. And while the engineers behind Pop!_OS have put their hearts and souls into COSMIC (a new Desktop Environment), the current available version of Pop!_OS has seen only relatively timid changes. Thus, it has become less competitive over time.
For example, over the past two years, distros have erupted that come with built-in Nvidia drivers (pre-installed).
So, Pop!_OS has gone slightly out of favor. But, if you liked what you had back then, then it's still perfectly reasonable to continue using it.
But..., if you're actually interested in the latest and greatest Linux for desktop gaming, then we'd have to mention the following:
Honorable mentions:
If you want arch but you have live (/jk) you can just use endeavorOS. It is Arch but with an easy installer that even sets up yay, so afterwards you can just write „yay [desired pakage]“ to install stuff
You have to enable firewall for each service (each port on which your pc is reachable) and I recommend systemd-manager to have a easy overview on which deamons are running.
Ah, yea, if you want NVIDIA driver, you can use nvidia-inst and to switch back to nouveau, use nvidia-inst -n
I got tired of the Ubuntu crap, and was delighted to find that plain Debian stable is fantastic now.
Use Fedora: easy to install drivers, easy distro, most things set up, not too much much bloat
If you want something more gaming oriented but still very desktop capable use Nobara
If you want the console experience on pc use Chimera OS
Unless you have nvidia and/or really new hardware, pretty much any distros works fine for gaming - I very comfortably use mint. But if that is the case, you'll probably want something more up to date like arch. Idk enough about opensuse to make any assertions about it though, so use your best judgement.
I'm running OpenSUSE and am very pleased. I even put it on my Steam Deck.
Only gripe I have with OpenSUSE is that it has very conservative defaults, opting for security first. So you will have to add your user to all sorts of groups manually to get everything going.
Pop is great for gaming, especially for Nvidia cards.
Check out Nobara
man i'm a linux enjoyer but celebrating 2% feels really desperate lmao, when it hits 5% i'll be ready to respond with an entire "oh sweet"
Feel you on that. 5% will definitely be a major milestone and I can't wait for it to happen. Hopefully at that point more manufacturers and publishers will take Linux more seriously and give us better support.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The Linux user share on Steam has smashed through the 2% barrier.
Not actually for the first time though, it did initially rise up above 2% in March 2013, shortly after the original Steam for Linux release when it left Beta.
Part of the reason it had higher numbers at the start, was that Valve added a special Tux item into Team Fortress 2 only on Linux but it quickly dropped in the following months.
With the latest info though from the May 2024 survey, Linux has now hit 2.32%.
If I have my historical data correct, we haven't seen Linux be over 2% since 2013.
Take into account the explosive growth of Steam as a platform and that's quite a lot of people now.
The original article contains 224 words, the summary contains 124 words. Saved 45%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!
All of my games run better on Linux, only reason for windows now is VR.
My main games are Star Wars Battlefront 2, Star Citizen, Minecraft and Cyberpunk
Do you not use Roblox? Microsoft got me locked out of it pretty good.
They likely don't play Valorant, Fortnite, Roblox, Rainbox Six Siege, Destiny or League of Legends.
Basically all of my games run well on Linux, but I wouldn't dare say they run better on Linux than Windows. Some do, e.g. Minecraft, but almost all other games have at least a bit lower FPS.
If games build for Windows in general ran better on Linux it'd be pretty surprising, given the amount of investment into Windows gaming there's from many more big corporations than we have on Linux.
Linux gaming is better than ever, but there's enough people expecting too much and going back to Windows because of Linux gaming shilling.
I do not run roblox, though I'm sure getting it working wouldn't be too difficult.
I recently experimented with ALVR on my Deck after overcoming some hurdles it actually worked quite well. Overload and Hellblade ran surprisingly well, even on the Deck. Just a hickup every 15 minutes or so when it was loading something, I guess.
Caveat: I don't run SteamOS, so it's a little bit easier for me to have all the dependencies.
VR and League, I miss the VR but I also like having a good excuse to not play LoL.
Just curious: Have you tried VR with ALVR under Linux? What is holding you to Windows?
I picked up a Quest 3 recently, and have been having success running it under Linux. That said, I don't know any different.
I did look into it around December but saw the index wasn't playing nice with Linux. I may look back into it, as thats all thats keeping Windows installed at this point.
Have you tried running modded minecraft on linux, how good would you say it runs of at all possible
Yeah, it runs better in my experience. I want to say, it may be different depending on the hardware just like Windows.
I use prism launcher, it auto installs fabric, forge, etc for you.