Hello r/linux_gaming!

Long story short, I’m tired of Windows, lately it’s been giving me problems after problems and after talking to a friend of mine that uses Fedora Linux, it caught my attention more than ever.I was already interessted in switching to Linux for the longest, but now that I’ve been having tons of problems with Windows, this might be the right time to do so.

After searching a bit, I’ve came to the conclusion that I might switch to Linux Mint (more specifically, the Cinnamon Edition).I have some questions that I’ve been searching but never got a consistent answer (since it’s probably more of personal preference).

Performance wise, does anyone know if Linux is actually better than Windows?

I’ve seen some videos and benchmarks and it looks like it really depends on the title, but overall, do you know if it’s actually better than Windows?

So, to people who are familiar with Mint, or actually use Mint, what Edition would be the best for me?
I’m currently using a laptop as my main device:

  • CPU - I5-12450H
  • GPU - RTX 3050 Mobile
  • RAM - 16GB

Does anyone know the current state of VR Gaming in Linux?

I play a lot of VRChat, and I just wanna know how the current state of VR Gaming is on Linux.From a friend of mine, he says that due to how Linux handles games overall, he has a way better performance than when we was on Windows, but I don’t really have no way to prove that since I can find little to no benchmarks (on VRChat).

Where can I download Steam games in Linux?

I can’t really find a consistent answer on this one…

Is it a good idea to Dual Boot between Windows and Linux?

Sadly, I can’t fully switch to Linux, since I still have tons of stuff that I’m too used on doing in Windows. So, what are your thoughts on Dual Booting between Windows and Linux?

I’m sorry for the amount of questions, I’m just really tired of the OS I’m currently using and I’m just really looking for something fast and lighter, but thank you for reading my post, have a good day :)

  • Confuzcius@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Edit: Thank you for all the replies, I might dive in a couple of distros just to really get a feel of it.
    I understand a bit better the reality that is gaming on Linux and I’ll see work-wise and the overall environment if it’s for me.

    Reddit has r/linux4noobs to help you decide if Linux, as a platform, is for you. YouTube is also full of relevant videos, tutorials, how-tos. Phoronix has countless professional reviews and benchmarks. You even have a friend who uses Fedora … Basically ALL the answers to ALL your questions have been at your fingertips ALL ALONG but, for some VERY weird reason, you either refuse(d) to do a lousy “Search” or did not trust the info that was given to you.

    Instead, you jumped straight to this particular channel, as if you already know everything that needs to be known about Linux and you got “gaming on Linux” as the last crusade to be won.

    INFO: Gaming is just a milestone. Definitely NOT the first milestone.

    Long story short, I’m tired of Windows

    HINT: The BEST operating system has always been and will always be the one you know how to use (despite its quirks) !

    Where can I download Steam games in Linux ? I can’t really find a consistent answer on this one…

    Really ?!? Like … really-really ??? Were any of these invisible in your search or … ?

    Is it a good idea to Dual Boot between Linux and Windows ?

    It’s not just good. It’s THE BEST approach, especially if you manage to have one dedicated drive for each of your chosen operating systems … and some other drive (or partition) for “generic personal data”

    Of course, as a complete newb you can get a first glance at any modern Linux distro by using a “Live CD/ DVD / USB” (see Ventoy or Rufus) or a Virtual Machine (Ubuntu, Mint, Fedora, etc, etc). Later on, AFTER you begin to understand what you’re dealing with, you can jump onto the next step (dual-booting and using as a

    LAZY ! VERY, VERY LAZY !