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Wandering Adventure Party

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  3. Linux gaming used to be awful

Linux gaming used to be awful

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  • Isaac Ji KuoI Isaac Ji Kuo

    @atomicpoet I think I've only ever tried to make one Windows game work on Linux (through Steam and Proton).

    It was Gris. It wouldn't work. I could only get the initial game menu to work but nothing of the actual gameplay. I tried for a bit, but couldn't get it to work. My money would have been flushed down the drain if I didn't also have a Windows laptop around (but anyway, it was too inconvenient for me so I ended up not playing the game).

    I have heard that it makes "almost" every Windows

    Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
    Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
    Chris Trottier
    wrote on last edited by
    #5
    @isaackuo I play Gris all the time on Linux—and fun fact, I’ve only ever played it on Linux. I even beat it there! It’s fully verified on Steam Deck too, with the green checkmark and everything.

    And just so you know I’m not making that up, here’s a picture of it running on Linux.
    Link Preview Image
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    • Isaac Ji KuoI Isaac Ji Kuo

      @atomicpoet So for me, it's simple. If you wrote your game for Windows, I'm not even going to try.

      That's my solution for now. Shrug

      Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
      Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
      Chris Trottier
      wrote on last edited by
      #6
      @isaackuo It’s kind of funny—Gris just worked. I pressed “Launch,” and that was it. No setup, no troubleshooting, nothing.

      It runs perfectly on my Steam Deck, my wife’s Legion Go, and my desktop tower—all running Linux.

      So if it didn’t work for you, chances are you either tried it years ago—back before Linux gaming really came into its own—or you’re using a distro that isn’t optimized for games.

      If gaming on Linux matters to you, try something like SteamOS or Bazzite. Most of the time, you’ll have a great experience right out of the box.
      Isaac Ji KuoI 1 Reply Last reply
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      • Chris TrottierA Chris Trottier
        @isaackuo It’s kind of funny—Gris just worked. I pressed “Launch,” and that was it. No setup, no troubleshooting, nothing.

        It runs perfectly on my Steam Deck, my wife’s Legion Go, and my desktop tower—all running Linux.

        So if it didn’t work for you, chances are you either tried it years ago—back before Linux gaming really came into its own—or you’re using a distro that isn’t optimized for games.

        If gaming on Linux matters to you, try something like SteamOS or Bazzite. Most of the time, you’ll have a great experience right out of the box.
        Isaac Ji KuoI This user is from outside of this forum
        Isaac Ji KuoI This user is from outside of this forum
        Isaac Ji Kuo
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        @atomicpoet I am using Debian Stable, and I'll bet the problem is that I'm using old graphics hardware that isn't adequately supported. I do not buy new expensive video cards. I buy used ones that are inexpensive.

        I do not expect things to work better now.

        Running Windows games on Linux does not matter to me. Not enough to run a different Linux distribution on one computer and dealing with maintaining that. And not enough for me to spend hundreds of dollars on a better supported video card.

        Chris TrottierA 1 Reply Last reply
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        • Isaac Ji KuoI Isaac Ji Kuo

          @atomicpoet I am using Debian Stable, and I'll bet the problem is that I'm using old graphics hardware that isn't adequately supported. I do not buy new expensive video cards. I buy used ones that are inexpensive.

          I do not expect things to work better now.

          Running Windows games on Linux does not matter to me. Not enough to run a different Linux distribution on one computer and dealing with maintaining that. And not enough for me to spend hundreds of dollars on a better supported video card.

          Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
          Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
          Chris Trottier
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          Isaac Ji Kuo There might be many factors but I suspect that using Debian Stable means you’ll have to make lots of changes before it’s ready for gaming.

          The other thing is, I don’t know what kind of machine you’re using, but it definitely doesn’t require a high-powered GPU. APUs usually work fine.

          Finally, regardless of age, AMD usually works better than Nvidia.

          Isaac Ji KuoI 1 Reply Last reply
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          • Chris TrottierA Chris Trottier

            Isaac Ji Kuo There might be many factors but I suspect that using Debian Stable means you’ll have to make lots of changes before it’s ready for gaming.

            The other thing is, I don’t know what kind of machine you’re using, but it definitely doesn’t require a high-powered GPU. APUs usually work fine.

            Finally, regardless of age, AMD usually works better than Nvidia.

            Isaac Ji KuoI This user is from outside of this forum
            Isaac Ji KuoI This user is from outside of this forum
            Isaac Ji Kuo
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            @atomicpoet "I suspect that using Debian Stable means you'll have to make _lots_ of changes before it's ready for gaming."

            I do not like the sound of that. Debian is one of the most popular Linux distributions out there.

            Unfortunately, AMD is not much of an option for me because I need 4K resolution capability, and the minimum cost of used 4K capable AMD graphics cards was just too high compared to Nvidia.

            Chris TrottierA Rob BosR 2 Replies Last reply
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            • Isaac Ji KuoI Isaac Ji Kuo

              @atomicpoet "I suspect that using Debian Stable means you'll have to make _lots_ of changes before it's ready for gaming."

              I do not like the sound of that. Debian is one of the most popular Linux distributions out there.

              Unfortunately, AMD is not much of an option for me because I need 4K resolution capability, and the minimum cost of used 4K capable AMD graphics cards was just too high compared to Nvidia.

              Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
              Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
              Chris Trottier
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              Isaac Ji Kuo It’s not impossible to use Nvidia—I have an RTX 3080 Ti on my desktop. But it’s nevertheless a pain. Distros like Bazzite make Nvidia seamless. Getting those cards to work well on a distro less optimized for gaming? It’s rough.

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              • Isaac Ji KuoI Isaac Ji Kuo

                @atomicpoet "I suspect that using Debian Stable means you'll have to make _lots_ of changes before it's ready for gaming."

                I do not like the sound of that. Debian is one of the most popular Linux distributions out there.

                Unfortunately, AMD is not much of an option for me because I need 4K resolution capability, and the minimum cost of used 4K capable AMD graphics cards was just too high compared to Nvidia.

                Rob BosR This user is from outside of this forum
                Rob BosR This user is from outside of this forum
                Rob Bos
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                @isaackuo
                I'm on debian Trixie and playing steam games with no issue. Video card is relatively new though, maybe three years old. Solidly midrange now, I think.
                @atomicpoet

                Isaac Ji KuoI 1 Reply Last reply
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                • Rob BosR Rob Bos

                  @isaackuo
                  I'm on debian Trixie and playing steam games with no issue. Video card is relatively new though, maybe three years old. Solidly midrange now, I think.
                  @atomicpoet

                  Isaac Ji KuoI This user is from outside of this forum
                  Isaac Ji KuoI This user is from outside of this forum
                  Isaac Ji Kuo
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  @rbos @atomicpoet I had a Quadro K620, which IIRC went for around $25 on eBay at the time (used). Looking it up now, I think they go for around $15 on eBay.

                  I do not know how they compare to what's expected for gaming.

                  I didn't have any problems installing the non-free driver.

                  Chris TrottierA 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • Isaac Ji KuoI Isaac Ji Kuo

                    @rbos @atomicpoet I had a Quadro K620, which IIRC went for around $25 on eBay at the time (used). Looking it up now, I think they go for around $15 on eBay.

                    I do not know how they compare to what's expected for gaming.

                    I didn't have any problems installing the non-free driver.

                    Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
                    Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
                    Chris Trottier
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13
                    @isaackuo @rbos The Quadro K620 was released in 2014—respectable for its time, but heavily limited by modern standards. It’s based on Nvidia’s Kepler architecture, which Nvidia officially ended support for in 2021.

                    That means the last driver branch that supports it is the 470 LTS series. Anything newer—such as the 500- or 550-series drivers—won’t work with Kepler GPUs.

                    Because of that, the card struggles with modern Linux gaming stacks like Proton, DXVK, and VKD3D, which rely on newer Vulkan implementations. While the K620 does support Vulkan 1.1, many games today require Vulkan 1.2 or newer.

                    So the issue isn’t Debian or Proton itself—it’s that the K620 is stuck on an older driver that lacks full Vulkan support. In practice, Proton performance on older Nvidia cards didn’t improve significantly until the 515+ drivers, meaning your K620 can’t take advantage of those optimizations.
                    Isaac Ji KuoI 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • Chris TrottierA Chris Trottier
                      @isaackuo @rbos The Quadro K620 was released in 2014—respectable for its time, but heavily limited by modern standards. It’s based on Nvidia’s Kepler architecture, which Nvidia officially ended support for in 2021.

                      That means the last driver branch that supports it is the 470 LTS series. Anything newer—such as the 500- or 550-series drivers—won’t work with Kepler GPUs.

                      Because of that, the card struggles with modern Linux gaming stacks like Proton, DXVK, and VKD3D, which rely on newer Vulkan implementations. While the K620 does support Vulkan 1.1, many games today require Vulkan 1.2 or newer.

                      So the issue isn’t Debian or Proton itself—it’s that the K620 is stuck on an older driver that lacks full Vulkan support. In practice, Proton performance on older Nvidia cards didn’t improve significantly until the 515+ drivers, meaning your K620 can’t take advantage of those optimizations.
                      Isaac Ji KuoI This user is from outside of this forum
                      Isaac Ji KuoI This user is from outside of this forum
                      Isaac Ji Kuo
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      @atomicpoet @rbos Thanks for confirming my suspicions that the video card was the quintessential problem.

                      This is the sort of thing where it helps having a broader range of experience and hardware.

                      Chris TrottierA 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • Isaac Ji KuoI Isaac Ji Kuo

                        @atomicpoet @rbos Thanks for confirming my suspicions that the video card was the quintessential problem.

                        This is the sort of thing where it helps having a broader range of experience and hardware.

                        Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
                        Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
                        Chris Trottier
                        wrote on last edited by atomicpoet@atomicpoet.org
                        #15
                        @isaackuo @rbos Glad to help. I actually learned this the hard way—back when I was using a Debian-based distro, the old Nvidia 470 driver (which was pre-installed) just couldn’t handle Windows games properly. Updating to the 570 driver fixed things.
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