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Why Are We Still Dual Booting?

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The Linux community is one full of passion. From the outside it may seem strange why a small percentage of people around the world care so much about an operating system, after all it's merely a tool or set of tools used to complete certain tasks.

For many of us it isn’t that simple however, and we have a multitude and wide variety of reasons which drive us to support Linux in the way we do. Be it contributing code, running websites like this one or simply advocating the OS and showing its greatness to others.

Some have different views to others, some may insist on calling it GNU/Linux and may insist on only using free software, while others may be less ideologically inclined and simply use Linux because it's the best operating system out there. What unites all these people is the operating system and the desire for it to succeed, seeing it widely adopted or improving in many areas.

In fact, this desire for success and to show the world that we exist has led many of us to take regrettable actions, ranging from abusiveness in forums to insulting the CEO of a major game development company or even going as far as threatening developers who aren’t supporting the platform.

In the gaming world, what often makes many of us flip out most (or the more level headed among us, respond in a constructive manner) is when two simple facts are stated:

1 - Linux only accounts for a small percentage of the desktop market.

2 - Many Linux gamers dual boot or have access to a Windows machine.

While there is not a huge amount we can do about the first of these two points, the second is one which always perplexes me considering it's so simple to amend. If there are so many of us who care so greatly about Linux succeeding (often to the point where we act immaturely) then why do so many of us commit the “cardinal sin” of the Linux world and use Windows?

When I set out to do the GOL survey, one of the things I expected was the number of dual booters to slowly decline as more games come out. In June of last year there were 500 Linux games on Steam. Since then, that number has risen to 1000 and we’ve had huge games like CS:GO, Dying Light, Borderlands 2, Dead Island, Civilization: BE and many AAA games right round the corner.

Despite this, and despite the passions which surround Linux, our survey has shown no significant change in the amount of people dual booting or who have a Windows partition, unlike the amount of people using Wine which seems to be showing signs of declining. In many ways, it seems as if while Linux gaming is making leaps and bounds, Linux gamers are standing still.

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The controversial phrase “Sie wissen das nicht, aber sie tun es” (they do not know it, but still they do it) from Das Kapital comes to mind, though condescending and completely incorrect in this case. Dual booting is far more cynical, a case of “they know very well what they are doing, but still they do it”.

We are all fully aware that the thought of Linux users dual booting and using Wine as a motive not to port a game to Linux has crossed the minds of many developers and even though we may badly want that game on our OS of choice, we still choose to be part of that percentage which makes that argument a valid one.

So why this doublethink? With the recent case of the WoW petition, it is a certainty that all those signing the petition who play WoW do so either on Windows or through Wine. It is easy to see how Blizzard CEO said what he said:

Michael MorhaimeLinux usage represents less than 2% of installed desktop operating systems browsing the web, and I would assume most of those people also have access to a Windows or Mac device capable of playing Blizzard games.


From his perspective, why should he spend money on porting a game to a platform when nearly all the people who would benefit from it are customers already? The irony of the petition is that its very existence also negates its purpose (unless, of course, Linux users were to abandon Blizzard altogether).

As much as I personally loathe the idea, the unavoidable fact is that we do live in a global free market which defines culture as an industry and decides who gets access to that culture based primarily on the profit motive. Culture, in this case, is video games and to many companies giving Linux users access to that culture does not fall within the worldview of putting profit above all else.

It is somewhat presumptuous to state to people whose lives are dictated by this fundamental premise that they are wrong in their conclusions. Simply put, yes 2% (or thereabouts) may be worth it to many developers financially, but when taking into account that with a game like WoW many (if not most) of their potential 2% like the game enough to sacrifice their principles in order to play it, then the rigid logic of the free market implies that WoW (and games like it) will never come to Linux so long as those individuals continue to choose the game over the operating system.

In essence, that 2% in many cases is non-existent and rather than being its own separate "market segment", developers like Blizzard will continue to see it as a percentage of the Windows market which also happens to use Linux on the side, that is, until people stop dual booting. Simply put, there is a significantly higher chance of games getting ported if users use Linux and Linux alone.

Thoughts and suggestions

The intention of this article isn’t to tell people what to do or to shout people down for not thinking in the same way as I do (in fact, if I see discussion heading in that direction, I may well see to it that comments are deleted). The intention is to create a debate surrounding a few simple questions to which there are no right and wrong answers:

- Why do you dual boot?

- Do you see yourself first as a gamer, then as a Linux user?

- Are the 1000+ games on Steam and hundreds more on other sites still not enough for you to be a 100% Linux gamer?

- If you feel so passionately about Linux that you’ll take questionable actions to defend it, then why not do the most simple thing and stop gaming on Windows?

- As someone with a tendency towards a specific genre, do you feel the current Linux suggestion doesn't cater to your gaming needs?

Ideally, I would like to see the number of dual booters decline after reaching some sort of consensus that it would be in all our best interests. I see myself as a Linux user first and a gamer second, and haven’t had Windows on a single computer since ~2008. However, I bear no animosity towards those who think differently. If all that comes of this article is an enlightening debate surrounding these issues and perhaps leads others to oppose the statements made in this article through other articles or through comments, then I’ll still be more than happy.

Even though I may have my own views as to how things should progress which may differ from those of others, I think we can all agree that being respectful, helpful and constructive goes a long way - be it to each other or to the developers which are (or aren't) porting our games. Though dual booting might not be something will (or maybe even should) disappear overnight, aggression and abuse certainly should. Likewise, the same goes for buying Linux games before porting - something which has been repeated and discussed time and time again. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Editorial
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About the author -
After many years of floating through space on the back of a missile, following a successful career in beating people up for not playing Sega Saturn, the missile returned to earth. Upon returning, I discovered to my dismay that the once great console had been discontinued and Sega had abandoned the fight to dominate the world through 32-bit graphical capabilities.

After spending some years breaking breeze blocks with my head for money and being mocked by strangers, I have found a new purpose: to beat up people for not playing on Linux.
See more from me
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124 comments
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crunchpaste Mar 13, 2015
Quote- Why do you dual boot?

Edit: As the comments on this article kind of remind me of some organisation that may be safely called "Linux Anonymous" I think it would be appropriate to start with:

"Hello, my name is Pavel and I'm proud to say that I've been Windows free for 2 years and Wine free pretty much for all my life." (Hehe, I know I'm not funny)

I think if there was a prize for the most ridiculous reason to dual boot it would most definitely go to me. My laptop came with Windows 8 pre-installed (included in the price for sure) and I still keep a small partition with that untouched installation as I'd feel like I'm donating money to Microsoft.

Another reason I guess is how minimal I am on storage space having more than 700GB free space out of 1TB (including that Windows partition) so formatting the partition wouldn't really do much for me though next month I'm buying an 240GB SSD and Windows won't be getting there.

Then again I guess I'm in quite a privileged position being a student in the UK as last year .odf was voted as the national standard as well as my whole college running on Macs using OpenOffice.
staticx27 Mar 13, 2015
I have no more windows partitions as of 4 years ago. It's not even allowed on my computers unless it's in a virtual machine. I have windows 7 in virtualbox only to check to make sure my resume looks good in Word after editing it in Libreoffice. The only game I use in Wine is Unreal Tournament GOTY edition because I'm pretty sure after 16 years, it's not coming to Linux.
Unshra Mar 13, 2015
(Warning I'm rather tired so this is going to turn into a ramble and most likely will not be coherent or have a point. You've been warned! ;-P)

A bit of background; I decided back in October to move away from Windows and to return to Linux. My reason was rather complex but the part of it was that I wanted to start focusing more on Linux (and Unix) administration as over the years I have found that I have become more of a Windows admin and while I've always worked with Linux in some form it wasn't at the level I desired.

At first I started off by planing to drop my gaming rig completely and convert it into a hyper visor and instead of having a massive overclock and water cooled system as my primary machine I would use a notebook instead. So I opted for a Dell 17 7000 series notebook as it provided the large screen I liked while still begin rather slim allowing me to use it on flights without any issues.

I soon found myself back into gaming however as a means of entertainment while staying at the hotels. This is when I decided to see how far I could push the little 750M and was rather surprised to what the GPU could handle. By December I was 100% Linux and only used Windows for testing purposes on my hyper-visor.

Overall I found that staying pure Linux has been easy, something that I wouldn't have thought five plus years ago.

However the issue I am seeing now is that while more games are coming to Linux many of them are poorly optimized and in some cases there have been games that run better on wine than their native counter part. I feel that once we start getting games that are optimized for Linux we will see more people move away from dual-booting for gaming reasons.

Who knows maybe over the years as Vulkan grows we might start seeing big title games release same day on Windows, Linux and Mac and have all of them perform the same. Until then though dual-booting into Windows be something that is tempting to many Linux gamers because who doesn't want to have a smooth gaming experience?

Recently I've been working on moving over to a more powerful notebook ( in the process of being RMA'd due to hardware instability.) This has given me the opportunity to experience games I have only experienced on Linux on Windows and I could clearly see what dual-booting is attractive I even considered purchasing two mSATA SSD so that I could dual-boot because it was just that much more enjoyable (Dying Light being a great example in my case.) However I have decided that if/when my notebook is replaced I will stick with Linux and see what happens as this year looks very exciting indeed!
Owlbear Mar 13, 2015
Quote- Why do you dual boot?

- Do you see yourself first as a gamer, then as a Linux user?

- Are the 1000+ games on Steam and hundreds more on other sites still not enough for you to be a 100% Linux gamer?

- If you feel so passionately about Linux that you’ll take questionable actions to defend it, then why not do the most simple thing and stop gaming on Windows?

- As someone with a tendency towards a specific genre, do you feel the current Linux suggestion doesn't cater to your gaming needs?

1.Still too much stuff isn't running on linux, even with wine. I wasn't using windows partition for a while(1 year more or less), but now I'm back to dual boot, as soon as they fix UE4 Editor for Linux, will be more then happy to go back to pure linux os.

2.I preffer to think of myself as Linux user first.

3. Don't think it will change anything. The big inflow of games to Linux lately seems to be coz of the steam project, sounds awesome and i really hope it works coz that will be good not only for them but for the whole Linux community as well, but without it I really don't think we would be seeing that many ports(or any) even if all the 2% were using only Linux. However there is one more thing here that i will mention bellow.

4. No problem with my gaming needs most of the time on Linux, I made partition for dual boot again coz of other software(game engine in this cas,however im sure they will get it stable, its already running just buggy). I'm using Wine A LOT though, I don't get why someone wouldn't. Will try to explain bellow.

Soo the other thing... World of Warcraft doesn't have native client, but it does have OpenGL rendering. Basicly OpenGL - Linux, Direct3D - Windows, So as far as I know only reaon a PC game to have OpenGL rendering is to make the game run smoother on Wine. And that it does, WoW runs a lot better on Linux for me, that it ever did on Windows(and i did run it on windows for a while too before).

Making WoW optimized for Wine basicly, so while no native client, a lot of linux gamers play happily and that blizz knows very well, The petition was for more blizz products apperantly of course, but most of the time ppl seems to be asking mostly for WoW. While it's not mentioned in the topic about blizz petition, I'm sure its counted by them, they did their part, support OpenGL now, will support Vulkan, basicly that means we can run it smoothly, at least if we are ok using wine.

I can think of other nice examples. The guys at Neverwinter MMO, they don't have OpenGL(hopefully will add someday), but when the game after 1 update stoped working on wine ppl posted in forums and they fixed it, right now works excellent on Wine again.

Or the trine 2 ppl, one of the patches made it unplayable on Wine if i remember right, they didn't really fix it but posted on the site what we can use to run it again on our OS.

One of the reasons I can't imagine signing a petition for WoW on Linux for example, we already have it on here, runs better then on Windows, I don't really need more and don't get the "no wine" attitude, gaming on linux right now imo is 90% wine and 10% hoping/waiting for ports.

It may change, with new engines more and more linux friendly and the steam guys project, but right now 1k titles isn't that much, and I think everyone can think of a lot more games they know/like/love that aren't ported then once that are. Though again if we add wine to that, looks a lot differently. In my opinion beeing a linux gamer and not using Wine, is like beeing a swimmer and trying really hard to avoid any touching of water. It can work, with proper gear, place etc. but overall - harder then it needs to be.

Just wanna say that Linux users aren't forgotten, even in some of this cases like blizzard, but the support for us is very often connected to Wine running the specific game and as that it works well. However if Linux gamers have the idea that Wine is something bad they will lose a lot more then 1000 potential games they can run very well, and here it includes MMOs etc
Vash63 Mar 13, 2015
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I have always and will continue to dual boot for the foreseeable future; however I am more likely to buy a game I'm not sold on or buy it before it drops as heavily in price if it has Linux support. For example I bought Hotline Miami 2 at full price whereas I generally wait for a Steam sale on Windows games. I have plenty of games to play, being able to play it in my primary OS makes me much more likely to buy it and spend time in it.
Aryvandaar Mar 13, 2015
I dual boot Windows 7 and Funtoo Linux now. The reason that I do it is because of GTA V and TW3, the latter which may or may not come to Linux as a port. I simply prepare for the worst, and most other games I don't consider to be good enough to boot into Windows 7.

It may be a lot of games for Linux, but a lot of them are indie games, and I almost only play RPG, adventure and mmorpg. There aren't a lot of those games for Linux.

I also want to add that those who judge and entire community, or judge anyone because of the actions of some people have to stop doing so. I'm talking about those who judge all who use Linux because there are a few bad eggs. This is extremely unfair.
defty Mar 13, 2015
3 games mostly, Fallout NV, Skyrim, and Ultra Street Fighter IV. If I had those, 100% working in linux, I could finally break the dual booting. Yes I know wine, but controller support, and small bugs are always problematic and I have sunk so many hours into tweaking wine trying to make those games really work, and it never satisfies.
STiAT Mar 13, 2015
- Why do you dual boot?
I don't

- Do you see yourself first as a gamer, then as a Linux user?
Linux user

- Are the 1000+ games on Steam and hundreds more on other sites still not enough for you to be a 100% Linux gamer?
Too many, ain't got enough time to play all games I want and which get released.

- If you feel so passionately about Linux that you’ll take questionable actions to defend it, then why not do the most simple thing and stop gaming on Windows?
I did.

- As someone with a tendency towards a specific genre, do you feel the current Linux suggestion doesn't cater to your gaming needs?
Well, MMOs are still lacking, but we'll get SotA.
lucifertdark Mar 13, 2015
Solar I have an Ipod Classic & it works perfectly with Banshee, my Ipod hasn't seen itunes since the day I bought it & first set it up. Is it different with a shuffle?
Eike 10 years Mar 13, 2015
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I'm not dual-booting anymore, but I used to for games.

When I deleted Windows last April, I found that I had booted it only twice in half a year. One time for a picture from a vetinary in a very specific format, and I think once for tax declaration.

It seems Windows survived much longer than it had to. Why? Well, I used Windows since pre-3.0 times. I guess I had hard times to imagine I could do fully without. Maybe, I would need it? Some day?

Now if it doesn't work under Linux natively (no WINE), I'm not using it.
To show publicly that I will not buy if it is not on Linux, I joined these groups:
http://steamcommunity.com/groups/OnlyBuyLinuxGames
http://steamcommunity.com/groups/LinuxUsersExclusively
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