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Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Site Info, Survey
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10 comments

Corben Jan 25, 2019
Ah, now with Steam Play usage ;)
(Or I've just not seen it before ^^)


Last edited by Corben on 25 January 2019 at 9:25 am UTC
Liam Dawe Jan 25, 2019
Quoting: CorbenAh, now with Steam Play usage ;)
(Or I've just not seen it before ^^)
That was added before this month's charts were done, hopefully the 1st Feb charts will have a good increase in the amount of people answering it so we can see how reception to it has been.


Last edited by Liam Dawe on 25 January 2019 at 9:51 am UTC
ageres Jan 25, 2019
After six years of using Lubuntu I switched to Xubuntu. LXDE became too glitchy. PCmanFM (file manager) crashes sometimes after copying a file. Desktop icons start to disappear too often on several computers at my work after upgrading to 18.04. At first I thought it's because of upgrading, and maybe some configs are incompatible with new versions, and I did a full fresh install on one of computers with formatting the whole drive, but that didn't help. I used to scroll tabs in the terminal with a mouse wheel, but cannot do that since 18.04.

I tried LXQt, but I found it's even buggier and is not ready for using yet.

So, I have installed Xubuntu, it works and looks nice so far and has similar RAM consumption to Lubuntu. But there are many small things differ. Lubuntu was perfect for me right out of the box, and in Xubuntu I have to tweak settings to make it more comfortable. For example, many systems have the same global hotkeys as Windows, but not Xubuntu. Why? I've been using Win+E to launch a file manager for all my file, but now it's Win+F, and Win+E launches a text editor. WTF? And mouse scroll make a window active instead of just scrolling damn window on the background.

Sure, it's Linux, so everything is customizable, but this means now I have to mess with settings after every install. And there is one thing I couldn't find how to solve. Maybe someone here knows? How to make mouse scrolling on the taskbar to minimize/restore a window instead of switching windows?
Tchey Jan 25, 2019
After years of Mint XFCE, i switched to Manjaro XFCE.
Liam Dawe Jan 25, 2019
Quoting: PatolaThe survey is nice but I think the questions about having used Wine or Steam Play in the last month are misguided. It should focus more on frequency, like if you use daily or once a week etc.
That just wouldn't work for our purpose, unless you want us to remind everyone to the point of spam to update it a lot more often. How it works right now allows for a little more wiggle room.
pageround Jan 25, 2019
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Quoting: PatolaThe survey is nice but I think the questions about having used Wine or Steam Play in the last month are misguided. It should focus more on frequency, like if you use daily or once a week etc.

Yes, I've used proton in the past month and I am waiting for a specific game to work.
Linas Jan 25, 2019
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Proton made me change my mind in the native vs. non-native game discussion. I never liked using Wine, because it was tedious. If something did not work, you'd have to mess with all sorts of DLL overrides, registry hacks, etc. If I wanted all that, I'd use Windows. But Proton made it fun again.

My two primary use cases for Proton are: 1) all the part ones that we never got on Linux: Torchlight, The Witcher, Deus Ex: Human Revolution, etc. and 2) all the games I have accumulated from buying various bundles. I still don't buy new games to play in Proton, because I think a native port is a better option. But if there comes something I really want, and it has a platinum rating on ProtonDB, I might just go for it.

Being a Linux gamer never felt so good. :)


Last edited by Linas on 25 January 2019 at 5:44 pm UTC
TheRiddick Jan 25, 2019
Steam just got non-steam game proton launch options, works pretty good except sometimes you might need to create a Documents/Steam folder in the prefix or internal error appears...
ageres Jan 26, 2019
Quoting: Linasall the part ones that we never got on Linux: Torchlight
Torchlight for Linux has been available on Humble Bundle for years. Not on Steam though, only as a DRM-free build.
Philadelphus Jan 26, 2019
After literally years of hitting that "nothing changed this month" button, I finally have reason to update my info: my brother got me a better graphics card for Christmas (a GTX 1060 6GB compared to my old GTX 750 Ti), and since one of my four 4GB RAM modules failed I replaced it and another one with 8GB sticks. And while I was at it I bought a 2TB M.2 SSD exclusively for games since my previous 512GB SSD (which also had operating systems, /home, etc.) was getting too small. Now I'm able to install all my owned games at once again (~354GB) for the first time in quite some time, playing with a graphics card that lets me max out the graphics settings, and with the recent Steam Play update I'm playing Windows-only games in my library (from the brief time I had a Steam account before switching to Linux) that I haven't been able to enjoy in years! :D

Quoting: LinasProton made me change my mind in the native vs. non-native game discussion. I never liked using Wine, because it was tedious. If something did not work, you'd have to mess with all sorts of DLL overrides, registry hacks, etc. If I wanted all that, I'd use Windows. But Proton made it fun again.

My two primary use cases for Proton are: 1) all the part ones that we never got on Linux: Torchlight, The Witcher, Deus Ex: Human Revolution, etc. and 2) all the games I have accumulated from buying various bundles. I still don't buy new games to play in Proton, because I think a native port is a better option. But if there comes something I really want, and it has a platinum rating on ProtonDB, I might just go for it.

Being a Linux gamer never felt so good. :)
I'm finding myself in a pretty similar place, actually; just a few days ago I found myself seriously tempted for the first time since switching to Linux to buy a non-Linux native game with the thought that if it doesn't work with Proton I can just get it refunded. Interesting times! :)
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