Quote from: A on March 22, 2024, 08:48:13Quote from: George on March 22, 2024, 06:43:37Ok, this may (or not!) be interesting not so much for the handheld gaming folks but those of us with older hardware.
While I have 2 'modern' devices (with WIN11 or could have WIN11 on it) I have a fair number of devices with WIN10 on them and even a fairly good/decent device that is really old that has WIN7 on it.
MS is seemingly constantly 'updating' their OS and changing the UI while they are updating it. Steam has dropped support for WIN7 and MS might be 'picky' on what devices get upgraded to WIN11 or even WIN12.
So there appears to be a MARKET for an ALTERNATE OS that you can run games on that is not MS/WIN specific.
SteamOS might be the 1st choice however at this point I question how deep its device/driver support is. My oldest box has 2xGTX780's in it and the newer ones have GTX1050/60/70's and 1 even has a GTX1650 in it.
Having alternate OS choices to allow keeping these systems in service would be a good thing. Given Steam's abandoning OS's leads me to consider GoG as an alternative however I'm not aware of them having Linux support.
You don't really need a gaming OS to game, any Linux distro would do. They all have Proton if you want steam and WINE which proton is based on. There are front ends for WINE to make it easier like Lutris, Playonlinux, Bottles and etc. I don't game but quick search says Bottles and Lutris support GOG
Now all you need is a distro that auto installs nvidia drivers for you. Try Linux Mint or PopOS. (You may need to get the latest kernel for new gpu drivers if you have issues)
As far as Steam abandoning OS, unlikely. SteamOS is based on Arch, so the work they do is mostly repackaging plus some closed source components which isn't that much work. The work they put into Proton/WINE is far more than maintaining an Arch variant. Even if they chose to give it up I am sure someone would fork it and replace the closed source components
Even Proton is more or less based on Wine, just with some extra libraries bundled in. Either way, yes, there are plenty of ways to game on Linux nowadays. I suppose a benefit of a high-profile project like Playtron is that it makes people more aware of the fact that you no longer need Windows to game competently.
Bottles and Lutris support GOG, but the best way to play GOG games is just through the Heroic Games Launcher. It supports GOG, Epic Games, and Prime Gaming (for the 3 people that use that).
I've personally used Pop!_OS and Nobara Linux (a tweaked Fedora with a bunch of gaming-centric features). As for SteamOS support on Nvidia, it's currently non-existent. ChimeraOS is pretty much an open-source, community-made version of SteamOS, and even that doesn't really support Nvidia.