I still see people asking which distro to use, is it ok if they have an Nvidia card? How ready is Linux for a gamer? I have been 8 months now on Linux, it’s about this hard to have an Nvidia card: click update. The way I switched was to populate the second m.2 slot on my MB and install Linux there, I chose Nobara, that way I had the fallback of Windows 10 if I had issues. Well, I still have Windows 10, it exists as a console with no internet access, it runs my Skyrim setup with it’s 982 mods that I can’t be arsed to move. Everything else is on Linux, it’s the default and daily driver. Look close, you can see my system automatically updating OpenMW for me, quietly supporting my 260+ mod remaster of Morrowind. If you’re wondering whether Linux is ready for gaming, yea, it is. Give it a try.

  • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    In the last 18 monts, they’re enabled explicit sync, which was pretty much the turning point in making NVIDIA drivers/GPUs usable. On top of that, they’ve open sourced the kernel modules.

    It’s very very different to what it was even 2 years ago.

    • Fushuan [he/him]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      11 hours ago

      Iirc, explicit sync was an issue for Wayland because how X11 worked meant that the driver had enough info to implicitly do the sync, and I’ve been on X11 using NVIDIA with very minor issues before swapping to Wayland.

      In any case, I agree that the drivers’ compatibility has been improved a lot in the last years, I love explicit sync.