From Hardlimit

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-13 points
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Great, but I can still only realistically play a portion of my library with friends on Windows.

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19 points

Compatibility isn’t perfect, but I have to ask, what does your library look like if so few games in it work?

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4 points

Most recently the pain in the ass games have been AoE4, and BeamMP. AoE4 crashes in muliplayer, there is a patch for that crash on protondb, but it seems I’m also impacted by an AMD related bug that happens intermittently and will restart X at a random times specifically due to playing AoE4. Tried various kernels and video cards, still crashes.

BeamMP, looks like a lot of people have this issue, some have been able to resolve it.

Civ6 used to have stability issues, the Linux client is a joke, I use the proton version because it’s more stable.

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4 points

Ah, I see.

Linux client is a joke, I use the proton version because it’s more stable.

This isn’t uncommon. Proton is way better if the developer half-assed the port.

Also, this reminded me that I wanted to try BeamMP. Sucks if it’s unplayable.

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18 points

I’ll boldly say that unless you have a multitude of games relying on anticheat, 90% of your game library works out of the box or just needs a little tinkering with Proton.

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5 points

You are right for the top 1000 games as per protondb’s numbers

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0 points

We’re gonna act like Bronze doesn’t mean broken sometimes? Okay.

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10 points

Why do you say that? I’ve been testing on pop os and almost all my games work well.

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4 points

Ummm, I say that because I’m the friend in the friend group where the games don’t work sometimes, and I’m not going to pretend like that isn’t the case simply because I’m a FOSS advocate.

I own a steam deck, I have decades of experience with Linux as a Desktop, server, and even some years doing game development, so it’s not for a lack of effort.

It’s undoubtedly a fact that some mainstream games don’t work at all, or well enough that you’ll play seamlessly with your windows friends. Even protondb admits hundreds of outright borked games. Being dishonest about this does more harm than good.

It’s amazing what Steam, Valve, AMD, etc, have done recently for Linux gaming, but it’s not the YotLD yet.

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3 points

Maybe a bit defensive. Curiosity actually exists.

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[This comment has been deleted by an automated system]

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3 points
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The only reason why Fortnite doesn’t work is because Epic refuses to enable Linux/Proton support in EAC.
The game & the anti-cheat itself can work under Proton just fine, it’s Epic Games that’s the problem.

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1 point

This is the sort of honest discourse we should be having in the community. The recent advances are nothing short of amazing, and I can play tons of great games with my windows friends, but there are some games, that left me, and sometimes them with terrible experiences.

Nothing like investing over an hour into a game with friends only to crash due to some Linux specific issue.

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5 points

Prove it. There’s protondb to check your library

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2 points

If you are using Steam, try Proton, it should work out of the box. Otherwise try Wine.

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1 point

I have hundreds of games in steam. Some had poor or broken play with games Windows users play together without issues.

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