I was browsing on system76’s offering to see what PCs they have and noticed that they have an ARM Computer that apparently faster than the fastest Apple Mac but for cheaper (Based), but I’m wondering, how well does ARM computers game on linux with proton, it is very expensive to me atm and I can’t afford it, but maybe in the future I could consider it to be my first desktop as I always been using laptops, obviously gaming isn’t like the main priority as I would like a workstation to do heavy work such as blender and stuff and perhaps put gentoo on it in the future (if its supported) but I would like to game on the side when I’m winding down that’s all, so can it game well?

  • TurboWafflz@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I think Jeff Geerling made a video trying to game on a similar arm system with mixed results. I’m sure it would work, since you can game on a Raspberry Pi using Box86/64, just probably not too well for the money

    • Ace120C@sopuli.xyzOP
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      4 hours ago

      I watched his video, but he didn’t cover that in great detail unfortunately, I was wondering if someone already owns one so he can tell me his review about it

  • Björn Tantau@swg-empire.de
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    4 hours ago

    If I paid so much money it better game the shit out of games. But I honestly doubt ARM can with the overhead of emulation. And they don’t even specify what kind of nvidia graphics it has. This tells me that the system isn’t really meant to be used for gaming.

  • 🜏 Jyan 잔 🜏@4bear.com
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    4 hours ago

    @Ace120C , well, after a super brief search, it seems like it can run Steam and thus game technically. However, the performance costs of stacking “emulation” on top of each other seems rather burdensome. If you’re running a Windows game on Proton, you have those call Windows-Linux conversions stacked on top of the x86_64-ARM call conversions. I can only speculate, maybe it’s not as big of a thing as I imagine it being.

      • IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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        3 hours ago

        I’m not too familiar on how well the x64 - ARM conversion works, but in general gaming tends to be more dependent on single core performance and I’d assume that emulating single core functionality with multiple cores doesn’t really work, or at least with performance you’d need.