It was only a matter of time. Surprised it took this long.
My last Windows will officially be the Win10 IOT I have installed in a Virtual Box, just so I can run a couple of little programs that aren't available for Linux, and don't work in Wine.
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
It was only a matter of time. Surprised it took this long.
My last Windows will officially be the Win10 IOT I have installed in a Virtual Box, just so I can run a couple of little programs that aren't available for Linux, and don't work in Wine.
And with that any chance I’ll ever buy a Microsoft product ever again.
I’d switch off windows but most of the games I play won’t work on Linux due to “anti cheat”.
Gta, bf6, rainbow 6, cod, none of these run because the game studios hate giving linix users anything and its not worth their time.
Most of them are made by horrible companies we shouldn't be supporting anyways.
Not judging, just curious.
What games are those? In the last 12 months I tried 151 games on Linux. All of them worked, only 6 required tinkering.
I recently found a neat list of games that don't work due to Anti-Cheat:
https://areweanticheatyet.com/
So it's probably one of the ~700 games.
You must not play most of the top 5 fps games then lol.
Literally everything a "normal" gamer plays is not supported on linux.
Not the original commenter, but for me it's Arc Raiders. I'm a fan of extraction shooters and have been messing with the idea of fully switching to Linux and ditching microslop completely, aaaaaaand then Arc Raiders was released
Then enjoy windows (unfortunately). You have no other option unless you buy those games again on a Xbox or PlayStation console.
@ClydapusGotwald @1984
Can you give some more inside of what you game and specially why ?
Not the original commenter, but my current ones are, EAs WRC it doesn't work on Linux and the clubs feature is used by a couple of communities and is a great way to have current rallies.
Raceroom is not great on Linux, very crashy. But it can work at least.
I am also deep into Le Mans Ultimate, which just added EAC, and Devs have said they will not support linux. Currently it still works, but I am expecting that to end sometime soon.
For my hobby there isn't really alternatives, iRacing doesn't work, AC Rally is just too early and doesn't have anything outside of leaderboards (and that doesn't even have friend filtering). In terms of Sim racing there isn't much that works really well on Linux and can't exactly get the same experience in other games, like a 24hr race with driver swaps, ranked racing with multi class.
thanks for the answer. i remember there was a scene for sim racing at one point, but i am completly out of this one. Maybe @gamingonlinux has some ideas about racing.
There are certainly options, but they are older or just not fully fleshed out for sim racing, Hardware has gotten pretty well supported now. And games like Le Mans Ultimate had their on proton fork to get it working. But If you want big races you are very limited software wise, you kinda only really have iRacing or LMU. And They both devs have been unsupportive of linux, although LMU does still currently work.
In terms of sims that do work, Automobilista 2, Raceroom, Assetto Corsa, AC Rally, AC Evo, AC Competizione, BeamNG.Drive, Dirt Rally 2.0 and i think Live for Speed.
There are options that are fun, but AC Evo is rough, AC Rally is great but you can tell it is Early Access. And honestly nothing on that list ticks the same boxes as iRacing or LMU for racing.
Outside of that though, I could absolutely switch away from windows. Nothing else I play or am looking forward to getting to play will have issues running
SteamOS Desktop can't come fast enough.
Cachy will do if I need to jump ship, but I would like to only make one distro hop and be done with that for at least a decade.