• themoken@startrek.website
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      6 days ago

      I have been a user since around 2000, I work in Linux every day, and I get where you’re coming from - but in the context of gaming Linux has really only recently come into its own.

      Like, could you imagine, circa 2010, telling a naive user that practically their whole Steam library would work with one click? Wine has always been a minor miracle, but at some point there was an inversion between being surprised when it worked, and being surprised that it didn’t work…

      • morto@piefed.social
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        6 days ago

        I used to be shocked when a game ran in wine without any manual intervention. Now I’m shocked when it doesn’t!

          • N.E.P.T.R@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            4 days ago

            At the time, I was running on an very old 2004 Dell Win XP laptop and it still had alright performance.

            These days on my full gaming PC, I get amazing MC performance, like 300+ fps vs my friend on W10 gets like 130+ fps.

            Linux stays winning!

    • FishFace@piefed.social
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      5 days ago

      As someone who gamed on Linux in 2005, I can tell you that the experience was generally garbage back then.

      I still remember making a bug report about the then ATI driver - performance tanked in certain situations in ut2k4, a game with a native Linux build. After months, they released a “fixed” driver which disabled some feature - so the game looked worse but didn’t lag.

      Then I was trying to get Enemy Territory (and its total conversion TC:E) - another native Linux game - to play nice. I ended up running a second X server so that I could alt tab, but that made sound even more interesting than it already was back then; a friend actually shipped me a PCI sound card to be able to use teamspeak in Linux.

      Then came source games, which worked but were choppy and missing some graphical niceties. Then I gave up, bought a laptop so I didn’t have to dual boot my pc, and never looked back.