<em>Hogwarts Legacy</em> must be conned to avoid crashing itself with XeSS upscaling.
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Did you actually read the article? I didn't see any mention of discrimination.Great, the world has become so divided we have to conceal our GPU identity to avoid discrimination and be able to progress.
Did you actually read the article? I didn't see any mention of discrimination.
Having recently made the leap to Linux in April as my only computing OS, and wanting games to work on it, I deliberately went with Nvidia as my GPU, which has historically had better support from the Linux community than AMD processors.
It's not just for the sake of gaming, since I do graphic art as well as gaming, so I needed a GPU that wouldn't be bothering me every time I spun up a program.
Intel GPU's as discrete video cards (as opposed to integrated with the CPU or a chip on the MB) is relatively new. Worse, Intel processors and boards are still more expensive (at least they were in April) than AMD's offerings, even when not riding the bleeding edge.
Nvidia's GPU's were more expensive than AMD's, though, but I figured the extra cost up front would pay for itself in fewer headaches down the road. So far, that's played out.
It's nice to see Linux being taken seriously as a gaming platform, too, which wasn't a huge consideration when I made the switch. I've installed Steam on it, and do have some games I bought through them that I could install, but I hadn't played them in years, so I'm not in any great rush to try them out. Still, the games I HAVE installed were not hard to install (though harder than in Windows), and they play with very few, if any, noticeable issues.
It's not an OS for everyone, but if you're looking for something that isn't Microsoft or Apple, and still want to be able to do what you did before, odds are pretty good you can get all your stuff to work in Linux, including games.
Yeah - I'm currently running an AMD card, and it's been fine, I haven't run into any issues that appear to be specific to AMD (or many issues at all).In my experience, since the amdgpu driver came out for GCN and newer AMD graphics cards, support for graphics cards without relying on proprietary drivers has been much better with AMD than Nvidia. I remember extensive headaches getting a pc with Nvidia graphics to work on Linux, but that was 7 years ago.
Having recently made the leap to Linux in April as my only computing OS, and wanting games to work on it, I deliberately went with Nvidia as my GPU, which has historically had better support from the Linux community than AMD processors.
Ask a dozen people if NV or AMD is better supported in Linux and you'll probably get close to a 6-6 split. It all depends on when they used each last. Since AMD made a first class citizen open source driver, they've been very popular in Linux.Having recently made the leap to Linux in April as my only computing OS, and wanting games to work on it, I deliberately went with Nvidia as my GPU, which has historically had better support from the Linux community than AMD processors.
It's not just for the sake of gaming, since I do graphic art as well as gaming, so I needed a GPU that wouldn't be bothering me every time I spun up a program.
Intel GPU's as discrete video cards (as opposed to integrated with the CPU or a chip on the MB) is relatively new. Worse, Intel processors and boards are still more expensive (at least they were in April) than AMD's offerings, even when not riding the bleeding edge.
Nvidia's GPU's were more expensive than AMD's, though, but I figured the extra cost up front would pay for itself in fewer headaches down the road. So far, that's played out.
It's nice to see Linux being taken seriously as a gaming platform, too, which wasn't a huge consideration when I made the switch. I've installed Steam on it, and do have some games I bought through them that I could install, but I hadn't played them in years, so I'm not in any great rush to try them out. Still, the games I HAVE installed were not hard to install (though harder than in Windows), and they play with very few, if any, noticeable issues.
It's not an OS for everyone, but if you're looking for something that isn't Microsoft or Apple, and still want to be able to do what you did before, odds are pretty good you can get all your stuff to work in Linux, including games.
I've switched to Linux from MacOS a few years ago, and ironically I have more and easier access to games than on MacOSHaving recently made the leap to Linux in April as my only computing OS, and wanting games to work on it, I deliberately went with Nvidia as my GPU, which has historically had better support from the Linux community than AMD processors.
It's not just for the sake of gaming, since I do graphic art as well as gaming, so I needed a GPU that wouldn't be bothering me every time I spun up a program.
Intel GPU's as discrete video cards (as opposed to integrated with the CPU or a chip on the MB) is relatively new. Worse, Intel processors and boards are still more expensive (at least they were in April) than AMD's offerings, even when not riding the bleeding edge.
Nvidia's GPU's were more expensive than AMD's, though, but I figured the extra cost up front would pay for itself in fewer headaches down the road. So far, that's played out.
It's nice to see Linux being taken seriously as a gaming platform, too, which wasn't a huge consideration when I made the switch. I've installed Steam on it, and do have some games I bought through them that I could install, but I hadn't played them in years, so I'm not in any great rush to try them out. Still, the games I HAVE installed were not hard to install (though harder than in Windows), and they play with very few, if any, noticeable issues.
It's not an OS for everyone, but if you're looking for something that isn't Microsoft or Apple, and still want to be able to do what you did before, odds are pretty good you can get all your stuff to work in Linux, including games.
Valve has worked with anti-cheat makers to get it working under Proton. Games that still don't work are because they developer (or more likely publisher) won't play ball.Something I've noticed, re gaming on linux, is that some (I guess mostly multiplayer) games require intense anti-cheat software, which simply doesn't work on Linux (and it seems a work-around is deliberately (effectively) impossible). See, e.g., COD WZ
Hey, your husband? Dead.I think a more apt title would have been "In ironic twist a very mid game requires obfuscating gpu identity to run on linux"
Also yes the game was weird and mid with minimal replay value.
Valve has worked with anti-cheat makers to get it working under Proton. Games that still don't work are because they developer (or more likely publisher) won't play ball.
Hilarious that earlier today someone in the Steam Deck thread said real PC gamers only play FPSs on mouse and keyboard.If a game requires anti cheat it's competitive multiplayer, usually twitch. I call that no great loss since that type of game tends to bring out the worst in people. Or in modern parlance they're all toxic environments.
Having recently made the leap to Linux in April as my only computing OS, and wanting games to work on it, I deliberately went with Nvidia as my GPU, which has historically had better support from the Linux community than AMD processors.
You're both equally annoying. What someone else plays or how they play it isn't any of my business.
Then you have Epic - the company that owns EAC. They officially support Proton/WINE in EAC now. But they refuse to enable that compatibility mode in their flagship title.Valve has worked with anti-cheat makers to get it working under Proton. Games that still don't work are because they developer (or more likely publisher) won't play ball.
Apex Legends uses the Easy Anticheat runtime on Linux, which just gets installed by Steam the first time opening a game that uses it and what ERIFNOMI referred to. The game runs flawlessly (haven't tried any other games like it, though).Something I've noticed, re gaming on linux, is that some (I guess mostly multiplayer) games require intense anti-cheat software, which simply doesn't work on Linux (and it seems a work-around is deliberately (effectively) impossible). See, e.g., COD WZ
The message it sends to me is Epic is still trying to fight Valve and they don't want to see their games running on the Deck.Then you have Epic - the company that owns EAC. They officially support Proton/WINE in EAC now. But they refuse to enable that compatibility mode in their flagship title.
What message does that send to a developer that uses EAC?
"Hey guys here's this Linux compatibility mode - but we don't trust it enough to use it"
Yeah, I'm just surprised we aren't still talking about getting sound to happen!In ye-olden-days the fact that we're at a level of getting AI Supersampling working on Linux instead of ... just getting drivers working to display an image... would have been very welcome!
That's why I'm not allowed to play Stellaris on weekdays.If you'd rather ruin your life playing 4X games until 4am, trust me brother, I've been there and I understand.
TBH, while I use Mac for actual working stuff and as my primary machine, I'm thinking of dual-booting it with Linux for gaming (I won't sully any HD I have with Windows), because, especially with Steam, it is a better gaming platform than Mac.Having recently made the leap to Linux in April as my only computing OS, and wanting games to work on it, I deliberately went with Nvidia as my GPU, which has historically had better support from the Linux community than AMD processors.
As a member of one of those "toxic" environments I would like to say go fuck yourself. /s, mostly.If a game requires anti cheat it's competitive multiplayer, usually twitch. I call that no great loss since that type of game tends to bring out the worst in people. Or in modern parlance they're all toxic environments.
Seven years is a long, long time in Linux-land. Normally Nvidia is plug and play on Ubuntu or its derivatives like Kubuntu or Mint Linux.In my experience, since the amdgpu driver came out for GCN and newer AMD graphics cards, support for graphics cards without relying on proprietary drivers has been much better with AMD than Nvidia. I remember extensive headaches getting a pc with Nvidia graphics to work on Linux, but that was 7 years ago.
As other have noted your information is unfortunately out of date. Generally AMD GPUs work out of the box and Nvidia ones sometimes do not. And while Nvidia's proprietary driver is fine-ish, there were for a long time problems using Wayland compositors with Nvidia hardware. Hardware rendering was only enabled in the Steam client by default a months or two ago after Nvidia-related problems were addressed, too. And using Nvidia's driver taints your kernel prevents you from using Secure Boot, and other problems.Having recently made the leap to Linux in April as my only computing OS, and wanting games to work on it, I deliberately went with Nvidia as my GPU, which has historically had better support from the Linux community than AMD processors
This seems like it could enable people to more-easily run the most-obvious VFIO which is unused iGPU for host and expensive dGPU for guest. If that's the case, I think intel is stepping up here on this issue.As noted by Phoronix, Intel developers contributing to the open source Mesa graphics project added the ability to hide an Intel GPU from the Vulkan Linux driver."
Yeah, no, thanks. Native frame rate or bust. How about they actually optimize their games? Heaven forbid! =P All that "magic" frame-generation bullshit looks like ass to me. Hell, in the worst case scenario I'll lower the overall resolution rather than having to deal with distracting telltale artifacts of AI-upscaling.Upscaling systems are likely to be an important part of PC gaming going forward
As far as I can recall CDPR just threw it in a (badly configured/outdated) Wine wrapper and called it a day. Same with the Mac version.(For the record, TW2's Linux port is so bad, it probably runs a lot better on Proton).
Oh piss off. The developer has nothing to do with the author comments.Can we please not cover this game until, you know, the creators stop hunting certain people?
If you want to play it all the power to you. But please let's not give it the attention it doesn't deserve.
Thank you
Nine years, six comments and a third of them are this pearl clutching...Actually she's directly profiting from the game and the "death threats" were people mentioning that playing the game is going to directly hurt marginalized people and not a very nice thing to do but the streamer was still hurt and started crying as shown here:
I'll bet money you couldn't tell a different in a blind test...Yeah, no, thanks. Native frame rate or bust. How about they actually optimize their games? Heaven forbid! =P All that "magic" frame-generation bullshit looks like ass to me. Hell, in the worst case scenario I'll lower the overall resolution rather than having to deal with distracting telltale artifacts of AI-upscaling.
And the same for you, you intolerant assNine years, six comments and a third of them are this pearl clutching...
Into the killfile you go...
As other have noted your information is unfortunately out of date. Generally AMD GPUs work out of the box and Nvidia ones sometimes do not. And while Nvidia's proprietary driver is fine-ish, there were for a long time problems using Wayland compositors with Nvidia hardware. Hardware rendering was only enabled in the Steam client by default a months or two ago after Nvidia-related problems were addressed, too. And using Nvidia's driver taints your kernel prevents you from using Secure Boot, and other problems.
That said, support for Nvidia hardware isn't bad or anything. It's just that there can be little bugs and some limitations. And only Nvidia can fix them, and that can take a lot of arm twisting.