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Punington: Yessss, I'm also a big fan of Pop's looks, there're some things here and there that I'd change (trash icon, omg), but overall the necessary tweaks can be minimal (on 3.38 I like Dash to doc, custom hot corners, impatience, night slider, and soft brightness).
P.S: I just remembered we were talking about this on the other thread, I'm such a moron, lol.
Myself I favor Dash to panel, different icon pack and maybe some other theme. Thankfully, there are plenty of options out there.
What I like the most is the responsiveness. I'm working with 8GB RAM and while Pop OS is not exactly what I would call light out of the box, it is snappier than something like Manjaro.
Also, I'm keeping an eye on Solus Budgie as I was pleasantly surprised, but it certainly needs improvement. Clean distro with impressive boot time.
Windows should be better at telling why some game does not work on it.
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Themken: Windows should be better at telling why some game does not work on it.
Microsoft has gone out of their way to prevent even simple errors from giving details; it's really agonizing sometimes.
Does Linux cause problems for game modding at all? Like, do mods for Windows games have problems if you try and use them with Linux games or something?
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dtgreene: It's not at all obvious from the text that it's a video, and I still consider it bad design to have a site auto-play video, even if that site is something like YouTube (or another video site). Hence, someone might not think to check before following the link.

NoScript may block too much, since web developers have been overusing and abusing JavaScript over the years. uBlock Origin doesn't block videos that aren't ads.
I agree with you on the auto-play feature. I always turn it off, for any website.

NoScript does an excellent job in my view and by default it can downright break websites.

uBlock Origin actually has some pretty neat feature built in. You can set custom rules, block domains locally or globally, block JavaScript and so on. It's an intricate piece of software, more than an ad-blocker.
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VanishedOne: HZD seems to have some particular issues that aren't necessarily GPU-bound: people at https://github.com/ValveSoftware/Proton/issues/4125 have been talking about CPU governors possibly being involved. On my machine there's noticeable lag when anything moves except the camera, which is perfectly responsive, and it's the same whether my graphics settings are 'favour performance' or 'ultra'.
I totally agree with you - in this case it is not an issue of being GPU bound for sure. That being said, even in other DX12 games VKD3D-proton does not currently fully exploit the capabilities of a GPU - particularly (older) Nvidia cards seem to be a problem.
I have been using 100% Linux for many years and what I will say is that I don't feel there is anything I want to do that I can't do in Linux, which I would be able to do in Windows. For the non-game applications that don't have Linux versions, there is pretty much invariably a Linux-native (usually libre/open-source) alternative available that works well.

As far as games, I find that most games that aren't Linux native run very well in Wine. I have played some 12-15 Windows games in Wine over the past 2 years and didn't have issues running any of them. I played Batman: Arkham City a couple of months ago and it worked great. I'm currently playing Detention, Commandos and Temple of Elemental Evil.

It seems likely that Wine will give better compatibility going forward for older Windows games. Also, imo, Linux has strong benefits in terms of freedom, security and general lack of 'bloatware'.
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temps: Does Linux cause problems for game modding at all? Like, do mods for Windows games have problems if you try and use them with Linux games or something?
No not really. Anything that needs a Windows installer can be run with Wine. The rest are just copy paste jobs with mod files, aren't they? No difference to windows in that case.

For example Grim Dawn mods work fine with the GOG version. You just use wine with the same wine prefix on the installer.

I wonder about Steam Workshop though with something like Skyrim. Hm. Steam is native on linux, but is the workshop integrated when installing mods? Would it use Proton even then? Probably not.

In any case, you could just go to Nexus Mods to manually install the mods.
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Timboli: And those who say Linux is better, conveniently ignore important factors.
I claim that Linux is better on all fronts.
So I’m curious about the factors I am probably ignoring, allowing me to make such a claim ;)

(it’s obvious we won’t convince each other on this kind of subject, this is nothing but genuine curiosity)
Post edited April 09, 2021 by vv221
I also claim Linux is better on all fronts, a superior OS to windows. The only way Windows is "better" is that more things are designed to run on windows, but that isn't a fault of the OS. And with Proton and Wine, most games can run just fine on LInux.

Anything else, there is usually a free Linux alternative to whatever you need.
Post edited April 09, 2021 by myconv
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temps: Seems like Linux is kinda popular on GOG and I've been thinking about moving to Linux at some point in the future, so I'm just wondering what you guys think of Linux. Is it just as good as Windows? If yes, why is Linux adoption so low despite Linux being free?

Can you guys still play most of your games made-for-windows on Linux without issue?
It might be interesting to include Mac in the comparison as well.
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temps: Does Linux cause problems for game modding at all? Like, do mods for Windows games have problems if you try and use them with Linux games or something?
Not usually.

For games that run under Linux natively, a mod that modifies the .exe, or that involves custom .dll files, will not generally work. (With that said, games written in C# may be exceptions thanks to mono; Celeste mods work on Linux for this reason, I believe.)

For games that run under WINE, it would generally take a .exe mod that uses a function that WINE either doesn't implement or implements poorly for this to be an issue. The Temple+ mod for Temple of Elemental Evil is an example of this sort of mod, as it changes the rendering engine. (It's likely to work if you have a recent wine and dxvk, however.)

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patrikc: uBlock Origin actually has some pretty neat feature built in. You can set custom rules, block domains locally or globally, block JavaScript and so on. It's an intricate piece of software, more than an ad-blocker.
I actually have used it to:
* Block the part of twitter that gives news updates. (Worth noting that I did this sometime before the 2020 US election, and it made my twitter lurking experience much less stressful.)
* Block that cat picture that appears on Reddit's sidebar.

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Time4Tea: It seems likely that Wine will give better compatibility going forward for older Windows games.
I think it is already good at that, to the point where I recommend it over native Windows in some cases. For example, it's probably easier to get Exile: Escape from the Pit working on it. (Exile: EftP is a freeware (formerly shareware) game that was later remade under the title Avernum, and then again under the title Avernum: Escape from the Pit. Some people prefer earlier versions of this game and its sequels for various reasons.)
Post edited April 09, 2021 by dtgreene
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Johnny_GT: If you don't need / require a specific software that only works on Windows, YES.
Problem is that a lot of business apps are Windows only nowdays.
low rated
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Johnny_GT: If you don't need / require a specific software that only works on Windows, YES.
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dudalb: Problem is that a lot of business apps are Windows only nowdays.
probably cause windows is better os
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vv221: I claim that Linux is better on all fronts.
As much as I am a fan of Linux and not much of a fan of Windows, I find this discussion ridiculous. Let's sing this song together.

I'd advise everyone that has doubts to try Linux. If you're the right kind of person, love tinkering and picking up on technical stuff, it will definitely appeal to you. If not, just stick to Windows. Whatever works for you.

It's the same with games if you think about it. Some people will never like hard core RPGs, because they are casual players and like a more guarded game experience. And that's absolutely fine.
Post edited April 09, 2021 by WinterSnowfall