Arch Linux. I wanted to try Hyprland with something and I felt like it was the easiest with Arch.
Just rolling with OpenSUSE Tumbleweed.
Cachy OS on personal PC and Bazzite on steam console (htpc) and a onexplayer handheld. Then just good old steamos on the steam deck.
Mint for two years. Then Arch for a decade. This year I have been trying out CachyOS.
Another vote for Bazzite. It's been such a smooth experience for a year or so.
Windows 11 :/
Though heavily neutered, where even defender is disabled.
I boot CachyOS Linux with a lot of tuning (and some recent game testing). A linux gaming OS! I'm using Cachy like 95% of the time; I am not anti linux.
But honestly... It's just not worth a few lost features and performance hit over Windows for me, on top of the extra hassle. Its easier to just reboot. Maybe the experience is different on AMD GPUs, but I suspect Nvidia is at a disadvantage here.
This is on a desktop. Based on my experience with a RTX 2060 laptop I used to have, you also have the to deal with graphics switching, rendering on one device while displayong on another, and making sure your 1050 actually goes to sleep when not in use.
Bazzite. Literally built for gaming.
NixOS. Works great. I'm a bit of a masochist.
Fedora KDE works great for me, but I'm quite comfortable with Linux already
Debian. It wont win any awards for fastest release cycles but it's rock stable with great support for my Ryzen 2700 and 6700xt.
I've been using Nobara for about 2 years and it's been very good.
Nobara (Fedora)
Tried Bazzite for a year. Was fun but now back to a normal distro.
Fedora on my desktop, bazzite (rebadged fedora) on my steam deck.
I'm always a lil surprised how few fedoras I see on these posts. Fedora is chill. Considering the difference between distros is basically a package manager, seems weird the second most bleeding edge distro doesn't get much love.
Void with X11 (fvwm3). The fussier games tend to be online live-service titles; every new release Genshin Impact does a new weird.
I use it for general things as well, but I have MX Linux on my laptop and it works well enough for the type of games I play ( nothing all that requirement heavy ). Steam's Proton works fine. So does WINE for modern games.
I've tried WINE without any tinkering on a couple old abandonware games ( 3D-Ultra Minigolf and some other game ) and both had issues with scaling, fitting into their borderless window, and crashing when selecting a menu button thing. So, older titles like those might be out of the question... if I don't try them on DOSBox.
Bazzite on the living room PC.
Manjaro (Arch) with hyprland for my window manager.
Pretty much any distro will work for gaming these days. Really up to personal preference. I use Arch but have heard good things about Pop!_OS.
OpenSUSE Tumbleweed here, both on my desktop and Steam Deck. i like the stable rolling release model. Allows me to get shiny new things that have at least gone through automated tests.
And in case anything goes wrong it comes with snapper configured by default for easy rollbacks.
Yes! Tumbleweed squad.....rise up.
This got me started with Linux. Such a great first distro.
arch on a walmart gaming laptop, hooked up to an old external monitor
Fedora
I switched to Cachyos KDE a week ago. It's the best distro I've used (previously I ran Debian KDE, and Mint Cinnamon before that). I have a GTX 1070 ti and it set up with zero issues. Steam installed perfectly, and I used AUR to install the gaming-meta package.
I game on Fedora because it was just the OS I installed on my gaming PC when I moved to Linux. Everything is fine between Steam, Heroic, and Lutris. The NVIDIA drivers were easy to install from the App Store and the only game that doesn’t run well is Death Loop but there’s been some updates and I haven’t tried it in six months so it may be better now. There was a memory leak apparently but I think there were more problems.
I've been enjoying EndeavorOS on Plasma.
I'm a Linux Mint user and I've not had many problems using Steam as a Flatpak.
Tumbleweed. Stable rolling release distro.
Arch, all flatpacked.
Be aware support for 1050 on 580 version of driver is ending so rolling release distos can make u a problem when they will upgrade version higher than 580
Generally they should offer a package for older drivers, though.
What I've found is that what works bet for your preferences and build is best. When I had an Nvidia card, Pop!_OS worked best for stable performance. I'm not a fan of Gnome though and it got me to upgrade to an AMD card and I've moved to Bazzite with no regrets.
PopOS. Lots of folks recommend bazzite for gaming though.
Linux Mint Xfce
Mint because it doesn't break often and usually fixes are simple enough, and Xfce because, though I don't know how well it fares compared to others nowadays, it was the variant that would run the lightest in a previous computer I had some years ago, so I grew attached to it.
Also besides Steam, Heroic (for GOG, EGS and Amazon Prime) and Mitch (for Itchio) work fine on it.
I was running a GTX 1660ti and an i7 until yesterday using CachyOS. Worked great! Though for older cards, I might recommend a LTS distro to ensure you retain support (Mint is my go-to recommendation).
A rolling release is probably better long term. Arch for example currently has Nvidia drivers as far back as for Fermi (GeForce 400/500) cards.
Rocking Garuda here!
Mint. I've been happy with it. I'm more familiar with debs/apt/Ubuntu so I wanted to stick with something familiar but didn't want to use Ubuntu. It's worked very well for me for gaming. I just upgraded my GPU from an Nvidia card to an AMD card which, aside from having to manually install the drivers from the terminal, has worked very well.
Up to a couple of days ago was using arch linux, now using opensuse tumbleweed.
So far I got the same experience in both, and most of the issues I got were related to my poor understanding on how to properly setup Hyprland when using a minimal installation setup.
I guess the distro itself wont make that much difference.
I'm using Manjaro because I wanted a rolling release distro that focused on kde, and SuSE didn't feel like downloading that day. No problems here
GTX 1080 + i7 4790K here: I run an Arch Linux Wayland setup (labwc) on my machine. So I use this for gaming, too.
I have a handful of native games running without any issues. Other games I run on Steam (installed via Flatpak to avoid the 32 bits dependency hell). Never had any REAL issues that were not coming from Nvidia not running well on Linux or Valve not getting Linux support right.
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