I am buying a friend’s PC for games. I want to avoid windows if at all possible, and I’m wondering what people’s experience using Proton in Linux for gaming has been. Are there certain publishers who use libraries Proton doesn’t handle well? Are there distros to avoid using with proton? Any other notes I should be aware of?

  •  GrappleHat   ( @GrappleHat@lemmy.ml ) 
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    8 months ago

    https://www.protondb.com/ is an excellent resource. Before you commit to Linux, look up your favorite games there to double check that they’ll work.

    My personal experience is basically all games work on Linux. To the point I don’t even look games up on protondb before I buy. The exceptions seem to be multiplayer FPS games which use anti-cheat (but I don’t play those kinds of games).

  • I use steam + proton (on arch btw). I’d say 70% of the time, the game just works without issue. 25% of the time, you can get it working with a bit of tinkering, or it works fine but has annoying performance issues. And 5% of the time it just refuses to work.

    Pain points usually involve anti-cheat and/or 3rd party launchers.

    It’s not perfect, but it’s totally viable.

  •  nix   ( @nix@midwest.social ) 
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    248 months ago

    The main issue nowadays is anticheat. If you play esports (league of legends,apex legend, fortnite), you will have trouble. Pretty much everything else will be good to go.

  • I’d recommend avoiding Epic Games, they seem to love breaking Linux compatibility. Publishers that force you to use their launcher, even if you have steam, can be annoying sometimes.

    I’d suggest an AMD graphics card if possible. It just makes things simpler. I think Nvidia is still having issues with Wayland.

    • Tbf I think Wayland is still having issues with Wayland, but yes, while Nvidia gaming works perfectly fine, if you try to get fancy you will inevitably hit an Nvidia specific issue (that almost certainly comes back to Wayland support).

  •  simple   ( @simple@lemm.ee ) 
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    8 months ago

    Been using Proton for a long time and my experience has been very positive overall. Most games work without any problems, the few that do usually have easy workarounds. The big stopping point for Proton is that many multiplayer games that use anti cheat don’t work well. Aside from that I use it for all sorts of games.

    You can see how well each game runs on https://www.protondb.com/

    As for distro, Proton should work pretty much everywhere but some distros provide a better out of the box experience.

  • I spent a weekend configuring a gpu passthrough setup to run windows on my arch machine. I haven’t needed it yet.

    Generally any popular distro should be fine. SteamOS is arch (btw) but that doesn’t mean its necessary.

    That said, i don’t play a ton of FPS, and when I do I have 0 interest in being competitive. Right now i don’t really play any games with anti-cheat for online play. When i do play shooters i tend to play on xbox anyway, so if you also have a console you should be covered for any edge cases, esp when cross-play is available.

    Once you pick the right proton version for a particular game things tend to just work. Protondb usually has enough info for solving any annoyances. ProtonTricks is helpful for annoyances.

    For anything non-steam, Bottles is excellent. Bottles can also run games with Proton, but also supports wine (which as an upstream to proton gets many of the features of proton anyway). Bottles is also great for running windows programs.

  • Nobara is probaly a good choice, never used to be but looks good.

    Only issue about linux gaming is anti-cheats, like if your friend wants to play valorant, r6, fortnite, or any new call of duty game, hes kinda screwed. You also have games like apex which work now because EAC supports proton, but ever since EA made their own anti cheat, its only a matter of time.