• Zacryon@feddit.org
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    9 hours ago

    That’s a complicated way of saying that Microsoft recommends switching to Linux. /j

  • the_q@lemmy.zip
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    9 hours ago

    “Linux can’t run my cock and ball squeezing app!”

    • Noerttipertti@sopuli.xyz
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      5 hours ago

      Good thing that Linux can run pretty much everything I want to play. Ckb-new and and Streamdeck-gui still need some finishing touches so that E:D and DCS are identical to old Windows setup, but everything else seems to run without a hitch.

    • logicbomb@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      I’ve occasionally tried using Linux in the past as my main desktop, because I think Windows as an OS is inferior, and lately because Linux’s UI actually seems superior, but I always got suckered back into Windows because I wanted to play certain games.

      I tried again last month, and this time, it’s different. The games that I want to play work well enough in Linux. Some of them have native Linux builds. Others work well enough in Proton, which is Valve’s version of Wine, a Windows emulation layer that can run Windows games in Linux.

      I don’t see any reason that I’d ever go back to Windows again.

      • Broken@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        Exactly. I tired SuSE back around 2001 and Ubuntu around 2006. It was not a better experience so I never stuck with them. I started using Mint last year and it just stuck. There are some quirks and learning curves, but it’s a good experience. Linux has changed a crap ton.

      • nfh@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        What’s really wild is that not only are games good enough on Windows, but tests lately are showing a consistent trend where the two are often indistinguishable in performance, and where they’re not, Windows isn’t consistently winning.

        If you’re not into the genre of competitive multiplayer games that have kernel anticheat, Windows isn’t really better for gaming anymore, outside of being more familiar for many people. Today we’ve reached the point where it’s a few fps either way, and people should use whatever they want, but if Microsoft keeps bloating Windows, it might soon be that the “Windows tax” also refers to the performance penalty you pay for using the familiar OS instead of learning something new.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 hours ago

        People who haven’t tried Linux in a couple of years need to read this.

        The amount of progress that has been made with respect to Linux gaming over the past few years has been astonishing.

        • Damage@feddit.it
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          10 hours ago

          Now if only big software developers understood this and released business software for Linux…

          • curbstickle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            7 hours ago

            Depends on what you’re looking for, for some fields there are fantastic options already.

            The others… Well considering the trajectory I’m seeing now (as a multiple decade Linux user), I think a lot more will start building for it. Maybe one flavor to start, but I do think it will be much more common.

            I’m seeing it with some of my clients already.

        • logicbomb@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          My understanding is that a lot of it has to do with the Steam Deck, which is Valve’s handheld gaming platform. Valve wanted it to run most of their catalog, but they also decided to use Windows emulation rather than Windows, so they forked Wine and put some money and effort into improving it.

          But some games are harder to run than others.

          If you use Steam, it might be as easy as installing it from Steam, because sometimes the games are multi-platform. FTL is an example of this that I currently have installed. But it seems like more and more game developers want their games to run on the Steam Deck, so they release native Linux versions. (Ironically, I think FTL doesn’t run well on the Steam Deck.)

          Some games run simply by telling the Steam launcher to use Proton as a compatibility tool. So, the only hard part is choosing which version of Proton to run, which involves picking it from a list inside of Steam, which then downloads that version of Proton, and then trying the game. And if it doesn’t run well, then try a different version of Proton and iterate. IIRC Rocket League is a game like this. On my computer, it seems to run best with the latest Proton beta. For me and my 5 year old computer, it doesn’t run as perfectly as well as it did in Windows, as it can stutter a bit when there are explosions on screen, but for me, it doesn’t seem to impact my play. And it takes longer to load, but I don’t think it’s possible for an emulated game to load faster on the same hardware.

          And some games require you to look up how to install them, and you end up having to install some Windows things into your Proton runtime using something called Protontricks. Skyrim is an example. It took a lot of fiddling to get it set up and the audio working correctly. But now I can’t really tell the difference between how it runs in Windows vs. Linux, except that it takes longer to load in Linux.

          • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            They also give a lot of money to Codeweavers, the developers of WINE, so that WINE can have enough developers to support it.

          • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            9 hours ago

            Yeah I’m familiar with all that… Though one correction, Proton is a “translation layer,” not an emulator. Same with wine (it’s right in the name).

            My experience has been that, often, the Windows version with Proton works better than the native Linux version. And most of the time, it just works with “Proton Experimental” or the most recent GE-Proton release.

            ProtonDB is a better resource than Steam’s own compatibility rating. I’ve been able to install and play several “unsupported” games on my Linux laptop (like Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition with DSFix).

            The majority of games will play. It’s kind of crazy how well it works.

      • NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip
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        9 hours ago

        I think what you posted is great and should be read by people on the fence.

        But conversly, I quit windows when XP came out becausei wanted to stop playing Microsoft’s games. There were enshittifying back then and it only has got worse.

        I even admin Microsoft systems for a living, have access to nearly every product that make for free, and I still will never use windows at home. Even managing azure or SQL databases or having to use products that are windows only I do it through a Linux machine. Sometimes by pushing commands, sometimes with remote desktop. But I do it because Linux just works, I can count on it. Not so much windows or Microsoft.

  • Optional@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    This just in, convicted monopoly Microsoft will fuck you over at every conceivable opportunity. Film at 11.

    • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      8 hours ago

      convicted monopoly

      Well that’s a blast from the past. That was neat-o how Mr Boies nailed a conviction and the remedy was … An apology? Was it even that much?

      Glad to see Microsoft is successfully building on that crushing no-remedy defeat by doing the same and more. #winning

      • ripcord@lemmy.world
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        53 minutes ago

        It was actually significant, and changed them quite a lot for 2 decades. Now they don’t give a shit anymore. But there was an impact.

        Woukd have been more significant if Bush admin hadn’t overridden the original judgment to break MS into 3 companies.

  • DonutsRMeh@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    At this point, I’m starting not to feel bad for people who put themselves through this shit. Using windows nowadays is like staying in an abusive relationship while you have an actual chance to get out, then complaining about it. Linux works no problem. And if a software/hardware vendor refuses to bring it to Linux, then you vote with your wallet. We need to let go of a bit of our love for “convenience” and try to be uncomfortable a tiny bit. Be a tiny bit inconvenienced.

    • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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      8 hours ago

      Honestly I firmly agree with this. If it doesn’t work with wine nowadays unless it’s a big thing i just don’t involve myself with it.

    • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      And the thing of it is, back in the good old days you actually had to learn how to use your computer. This took effort, comprehension, and skill. And probably reading some manuals. Like, actual words printed on dead trees, bound up into a book. This was normal and expected, and you would build up your skillset to operate the machine you probably paid thousands of dollars for. No one had a problem with this then.

      Learning to use Linux is no different, but nowadays everyone just wants everything handed to them and they’ll steadfastly refuse to put forth any effort while simultaneously failing to realize that figuring out whatever the next workaround is to get around something that Microsoft broke for them in the last update is basically exactly the same thing. Think back when you were learning to use DOS or trying to install your VESA local bus video card drivers in Windows 3.1, or desperately fiddling around with EMM386 in your config.sys file to try to get enough conventional memory freed up at startup to run Doom. If you had the amount of online resources we have now to just get the answer and not have to call tech support (and probably pay for it), or paw through a manual, or just be fucked and have to figure out by trial and error on your own, we would have all been stoked.

      Entitlement breeds complacency, and complacency leads to the Dark Side. If you go out of your way to teach yourself to be helpless, you will be helpless.

      Back then you owned your computer. By and large outside of some specific special purpose fuckery with licensing dongles you physically possessed the software you ran. Like, on a disk. You controlled what you ran, not some outside source. With all of the commercial operating systems (this includes OSX and iOS, Android, and Windows all to various degrees) this is now actively being taken away from you. The only way to claim it back is to run one of the open source platforms.

    • kewjo@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      the main difference is that Microsoft builds features quickly and for profit. that means the focus isn’t always on what the user wants, so they make tradeoffs that are good enough to not disturb the user base. recently with the AI craze basically showing how little they really care for the user.

      Linux on the other hand is FOSS, anyone who wants a feature can build it. this is slower to deliver because the profit incentive (if there even is one) isn’t as big but that also means there don’t have to be compromises to delivered features.

      looking at both these operating models i would rather be in the group building the future for users rather than shareholders. if it means waiting a few months for a few things to work as smoothly as I want I’m ok with that because it only keeps getting better and it’s literally free.

    • Glitterbomb@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      Just finished building a new PC last night, 64GB RAM, 8GB vRAM, 2TB m.2, 8x8TB HDD, and windows will never goddamn touch it. It feels weird, but so far so good.

      • RobotZap10000@feddit.nl
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        9 hours ago

        8x8TB HDD

        64 terabytes of HDD storage?! What in the RAID will you do with all of that? And more importantly, how much did it cost?

        • Glitterbomb@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          Jellyfin. The HDDs were only ~$110 each. Seagate 5400s but w/e it’s mass storage. No raid, drives will just be filled, cloned, and the clone dropped into a second system, also with no windows 🤬

          • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            Look at ZFS, it’s a bit more intelligent about using the space. They’ll be part of a pool of drives that you create ‘datasets’(basically virtual drives) from and you can choose your level of redundancy (including none at all if you want to roll the dice there).

            I have a 20TB array, 16TB available. It’s already saved me from a lost disk. Using Seagate 5x 4TB 5400s also, with a NVME drive for the ZIL (speeds up writes). I have a 32GB ARC (a ZFS cache in RAM) so, even though the drives are slow the RAM and NVME drives ensure that it always feels snappy.

            You can use zfs-send to clone the data to a new system without them having to have an exact copy of your original setup (if you’re using drive images). It is a copy on write filesystem so it supports snapshotting (creating backups of the block level diffs, so it is very space efficient as it only stores the block-level changes to the file).

  • peoplebeproblems@midwest.social
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    8 hours ago

    Oh well. I’m just glad I can access all my files on NTFS so I don’t even have to migrate anything.

    Maybe reinstall some games, and say no more to others, but that’s the way things be.

    • Seefra 1@lemmy.zip
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      4 hours ago

      Oh well. I’m just glad I can access all my files on NTFS

      Shhh! Don’t give them ideas…

      • xthexder@l.sw0.com
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        2 hours ago

        They’ve already been pushing their idea to prevent this for years. It’s called OneDrive

  • artyom@piefed.social
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    7 hours ago

    Yeah I mean how are they going to verify you paid without an associated account

    • Taldan@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      A key, exactly like they did it for decades? Same way they verified you paid for that copy of Windows?

      • JohnEdwa@sopuli.xyz
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        4 hours ago

        As someone who has actually never bough a Windows key even though I started with Win 98, and I before this Win 10 installation have never genuinely activated any them, I quite easily understand why they don’t do it that way any more. I also do remember back when Windows 7 was going through this exact same thing how trivially easy it was to get those updates without paying - so easy in fact that most people assumed MS did it on purpose just so that people would rather pirate them than run an unpatched installation for three years.

        • HertzDentalBar@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 hour ago

          It’s not an assumption, it’s the reality. They made it easy so they could obtain marketshare, same shit every company does before they bend you over.

        • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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          5 hours ago

          Back in the days of Dinosaurs and AOL CDs, you could just go to Best Buy and buy a CD with the Windows software and a key was printed on a scratch-off panel.

          You could even just buy a key electronically from some grey market websites.

  • Australis13@fedia.io
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    12 hours ago

    shakes fist

    Family members have PCs that can’t support Windows 11 (not that I’d want them to get it anyway) and I’m not yet in the position to migrate them to Linux.

    This type of behaviour makes me glad I’m most of the way to ditching MS entirely on my own systems.

    • TheFeatureCreature@lemmy.ca
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      11 hours ago

      A lot of software still requires Windows.

      Games are a big one for sure, but there is a lot of productivity and creative software that does not run on Linux.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 hours ago

        Games are a big one for sure

        Unless we’re talking about the handful of kernel-level anti-cheat games where the devs have refused to allow Linux support through Proton, nearly every game you own will work. Most of them without any tinkering whatsoever.

      • theunknownmuncher@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        This is a myth and has been for several years. The only games that do not work with linux are ones that have intentionally artificially disallowed the use of linux using kernel level anticheat (rootkit). Many of these games worked on linux until adding no-linux policies to their anticheat.

        There is no technical incompatibility, only artificial policy choices that game companies have made

        EDIT: you can downvote me, but I am still correct.

        • nocturne@slrpnk.net
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          11 hours ago

          I have been trying to get the sims to work on my wife’s Linux laptop. I can either get it to run at 3-4fps, or I can get it to run without the ability to save anything.

          I have Steam deck and with every game I have tried on it so far working, I thought it would be the same with a laptop. Boy was I wrong.

          • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            10 hours ago

            Not sure which Sims you’re referring to, but it looks like it should work: https://www.protondb.com/search?q=the+Sims+

            It looks like The Sims 4 is the only one that might need some tinkering. Stupid EA installers…

            Though the only entry for the first Sims game that appears in the results is the “Legacy Collection,” so if you’re referring to like the original CD-ROM or something, it might be different.

            Edit: just noticed that Sims 3 doesn’t appear to have any entries on ProtonDB so I don’t know… If any of them don’t work is most likely because of EA bullshit

            • nocturne@slrpnk.net
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              10 hours ago

              Sims 4, and I have tried every version of Proton, I have tried proton ge or whatever it is, I have tried every suggestion in the sims 4 protondb entry.

              I have tried the suggestions in my thread about it. (I think there was one I still need to try, actually)

              I have the fitgirl repack, I have tried via steam, I have tried the .exe from EA.

          • chickenf622@sh.itjust.works
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            9 hours ago

            What distro of Linux did you install on the laptop? I’ve had no luck getting wine to work on Fedora, but my desktop is running Bazzite which is based on the steam deck OS and I’m games run great (sometimes with tweaking required).

              • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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                2 minutes ago

                Oh, Sims 4 fit girl pack Ive gotten to run consistently on Cinnamon. Feel free to ping me sometime if you try it and run into an issue, I may be able to get lucky with a pointer.

                It’s got a shit ton of expansions in it.

                Edit: (Believe the last couple of times I did the installs through Lutris. I just picked the .exe and used the standard wine defaults for the install, then once it’s done I believe it worked fine by adding a game and pointing it to the .exe for the play file. Then if you feel like it you can switch to proton to see if you get better performance, but a Mint install with a Pentium Processor with 4gb of ram (HP touchsmart) was able to run it, so most anything should be able to use the standard wine setup just fine.)

        • Glog78@digitalcourage.social
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          11 hours ago

          @theunknownmuncher @TheFeatureCreature

          Ok let’s give you some more software which still don’t work with linux

          - recordbox
          - serato
          - traktor
          - engine dj

          While recordbox 6 still worked in a kvm environment … recordbox 7 crashes even in this environment.
          You can to a certain degree avoid maybe serato or traktor and use “engine dj in a kvm” to prepare denon stuff but you always need recordbox for preparing usb sticks too as a dj.

          • theunknownmuncher@lemmy.world
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            10 hours ago

            Again, further proving my point. Rekordbox was arbitrarily designed to detect if it is being run with WINE to prevent use with linux. There is no technical incompatibility, only a policy choice, and you can get rekordbox to run with linux if you jump through hoops to defeat the WINE detection.

        • TheFeatureCreature@lemmy.ca
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          11 hours ago

          I never gave a reason why a game would/wouldn’t run on Linux. I just said that games are a reason some people continue to use Windows.

          • theunknownmuncher@lemmy.world
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            11 hours ago

            It’s a very small subset of games and most are live service microtransaction garbage not worth playing anyway. Many are spyware and viruses disguised as games, eg Valorant

            • TheFeatureCreature@lemmy.ca
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              10 hours ago

              The quality of those games is irrelevant. The user asked why people still use Windows and I gave a few examples. Simple as that.

              You are arguing for the sake of it.

              • andyburke@fedia.io
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                10 hours ago

                No, they’re saying you are making a mountain of molehill and using it as justification. You are saying you are technically correct, the best kind of correct.

                Now you two feel free to proceed, I have my popcorn.

                • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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                  10 minutes ago

                  Yeah but they are saying a reason why people don’t move, not a justification of why he isn’t.

                  That said I had to run a program that detected my computer specs for a job interview recently, and they flagged my machine because I had just booted Windows in Virtual box so I could hopefully pass their test. Instead I had to borrow my spouses laptop, run the test then went back to using my computer for everything else once the test was over.

                  That said, you should never take a job that requires you to use your own hardware… But desperate times…

        • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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          10 hours ago

          I just wanted to chime in that there’s far more reasons that your software doesn’t work on Linux than just the developer saying no.

          Basically, if your game or software has to interface with anything at the driver level, such as a keyboard or a headset configuration software, or anything that needs to access complete system access such as kernel level access or being able to see processes outside of the wine environment. It’s going to be incompatible. This is by design for system security and is unlikely to change on official releases any time soon.

          Additionally, if the game requires any type of integration into basically anything Microsoft, so be it the Microsoft account services, the authentication token services, multiplayer services, applications on the MS store etc, it’s going to be a no go as they have yet to make a decent translation layer for those systems. Being said with the push for demand of Game Pass on PC, there are people working on those projects, but I haven’t personally seen anything that had decent progress.

          I have to hard disagree with the statement that it’s a myth. Yes, many games will work with minor tinkering. However, We are still a long way from having something that is just a click play and it works style system and it’s not usually from developer choices (outside of choosing not to make a Linux distributable)

          Being said, it has gone a long way since I started using Linux back with Mint Maya. ProtonDB is an excellent resource to find known workarounds when it breaks, But you definitely should not go into any Linux system expecting it to “just work™”

          • andyburke@fedia.io
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            10 hours ago

            Tell me you haven’t tried Proton on Linux without telling me you haven’t tried Proton on Linux.

            • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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              9 hours ago

              I have multiple versions of proton installed currently. However, I’ve mostly given up on the glorious egg rolls because they seem to have caused more issues than they are worth. But if you have a specific version that you’ve found is easier to use and not as annoying, I’m up for suggestions.

              Once my system loads, I’ll tell you what versions I’ve tried and which ones I’ve had issues with.

                • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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                  8 hours ago

                  Currently I have proton GE 9-7 as my default for steam(with the hope that it works), and when that fails I swap to proton 9-0-4 or experimental, but I have GE 10-10 and 10-4 installed but they currently aren’t on any games as I haven’t got any games to seem to want to run with them.

                  Then on lutris main I’m using a custom runner for one of my games because it needs to get around EAC since standard support is iffy, but I default to Wine 10 for it as they state proton shouldn’t be used on non-steam. However I do have Lutris-GE-8-26 installed but it only ever worked right on one of the games.

                  Then for lutris on my distrobox Arch container(because FF XIV and Genshin launchers & controller support break for some reason otherwise) I use Wine-ge-8-26 which is a coinflip of if it lets me launch or crashes which makes me suspect that theres a race condition somewhere.

                  I haven’t had good experiences with GE which is why I was hoping you might have some recommendations on a /stable/ version if you can call GE stable lol

          • theunknownmuncher@lemmy.world
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            10 hours ago

            Tl;dr parrotted talking points completely irrelevant since 2022

            Additionally, if the game requires any type of integration into basically anything Microsoft

            If you want to specifically use Microsoft software then you have to use Microsoft software? Wow, gee, what a perceptive point. You got me there lmao

            • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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              9 hours ago

              I’m parroting old talking points because those talking points still exist. They existed in 2022. They existed in 2012 when I started, and they still exist today August 2025.

              I said I agree that wines gotten better, but I’m sick and tired of people thinking that it’s some sort of magical unicorn that can just resolve all the inner communication issues with Windows & Linux.

              In the last 2 months alone I have had several games that have failed to launch completely. at least 10 games that have required me using a specific proton version. One game that required me to install a custom wine runner that’s specifically configured for the game to function, a handful of software incompatibilities, The most annoying of which being the software that is supposed to make my headset compatible with the computer, which required me due to the fact it’s not compatible with wine, to have to make my own audio profile to split the two mixes it has, and I’m currently working on a custom user interface for it to allow me to actually change the settings on the headset.

              All of these examples are completely ignoring the reason that you provided of companies not wanting to support it. It’s just the support doesn’t exist in the current wine infrastructure. If we’re including the games that are using kernel level AC or disabling the usage on Linux, that list becomes bigger.

              • theunknownmuncher@lemmy.world
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                8 hours ago

                those talking points still exist. They existed in 2022. They existed in 2012 when I started, and they still exist today August 2025.

                Nope!

                at least 10 games that have required me using a specific proton version

                So in other words, 10 games that worked on Linux…

                • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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                  8 hours ago

                  10 games that /launched/ on linux. there is a difference. It was for sure not 10 games that ran the same as if in a windows enviroment. For example one of those games in that critera you can’t tab out of it or it hard crashes. (Safecracker if you were curious)

                  Another one of those games was “The Isle” which has a raving disco ball sky during the night time.

                  Then theres phas… which while it functions the mic support is iffy cant work in lobby and night vision video is broken

                  Of the popular titles, of what I tried was probably Phas, Death Stranding (random crashes when the BT’s show), Sniper Elite 3 (overall laggy), Ark SE (not surprising but it has massive pre-game queueing if the server is modded so it takes 20-30 minutes to enter a modded server), Genshin Impact (controller issue on my main OS so i need to run it on my Arch distrobox) and FF XIV which launcher crashes unless I run it in a distrobox, and has weird audio issues.

    • Psaldorn@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      For me, Minecraft bedrock (for kids) but looks like anything MS tainted will start (or maybe already does) require windows.

      Looks like I have to decide what to do soon because they’re still on W10.

      • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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        8 hours ago

        it will be a slight downgrade, but they do have a Minecraft bedrock wrapper program that uses the Android version of Minecraft, so technically Pocket Edition, and that’s probably the easiest currently at getting that version of Minecraft to run on Linux.

    • selokichtli@lemmy.ml
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      10 hours ago

      It’s stupid, honestly. I was trying to play Fallout New Vegas for the fifth time, and starting the game I realized the main radio station of the game, which repeats forever, was mute. For my weird taste, this was a dealbreaker, as IDK how they do it, but their playlists have this quality to immerse me in the game no matter how many times I listen to them. Tried every fix I could find to sort this problem with no success. So, back to Windows 10, and it works. At this point of time, I don’t play New Vegas, but there are so many GB to download, partitions to extend, etc. I guess in December I will try to go back to Linux.

    • Waldelfe@feddit.org
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      8 hours ago

      I still need to use it for university. We often need to use very specific programs for homework and I don’t know if I can always find an alternative on linux. Even if, I’d have to go through the hastle of converting to the requested file formats. And it’s not guaranteed that I will always find a solution for every course I’ll take. Unfortunately education still expects you to work with Windows and programs that only work on Windows.

    • twinnie@feddit.uk
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      11 hours ago

      I say this as a Linux user, Windows is still considerably easier to use and it certainly looks a lot slicker.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 hours ago

        and it certainly looks a lot slicker.

        As someone who is still required to use Windows on my work laptop, hard disagree.

        • twinnie@feddit.uk
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          5 hours ago

          Im genuinely curious as to what themes and DE you’re using that looks better. In Windows everything is slick and polished, stuff slides and bounces around, the colours are consistent and work together, it’s all pretty elegant. I’m using KDE right now and all that I get is the start menu thing changes shade when I hover the mouse over it. I also use Gnome and XFCE, Gnome is pretty good and XFCE is obviously really basic.

    • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 hours ago

      I have one extremely important game that is a half life 1 mod and will NOT run on Linux.

      Plus, pretty much all I do on my main desktop is play games.