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Here is your up to date list of what distro you should be picking if you want to start gaming on Linux in 2026. The latest edition of you telling me I'm wrong.

Back in the 2025 edition of the article I suggested Kubuntu, and while it worked reasonably well overall it feels a bit like an unloved child. I used it for a long time and was mostly happy with it, but times change and so does the Linux and open source world.

Despite what you read elsewhere - you don't need to go with the latest random "gaming" distribution. The best thing to do is to stick with the crowd, and go with the bigger more well-known distributions. Most "gaming" distributions just throw a few random tweaks and a new theme on top of something else, they can usually just be ignored. Don't fall for their hype. There are literally 100s of Linux distributions, so GamingOnLinux is here to help you just cut through all that noise.

Desktop

My overall recommendation for 2026 on desktop? Fedora KDE. Fedora is generally a lot more up to date than Ubuntu / Kubuntu while not being constantly bleeding-edge like Arch Linux, and apart from an unfortunate snafu with a Mesa driver update, it has been one of the most pleasant and stable experiences I've ever had in all my years running Linux. With Fedora KDE also now promoted to a front-row seat too, it has never been a better time for it.

You don't get the multiple-year long-term support that you do from the likes of Ubuntu, so you need to jump between Fedora versions more often but that's not exactly a bad thing. Fedora is a lot more leading-edge with updates, and for gaming with system updates that's actually quite a nice bonus.

Fedora do a new release around every 6 months, with ongoing updates to each release for around 13 months. So realistically, you can do a major upgrade only once a year and be done with it.

An annoying downside to Fedora — Installing NVIDIA GPU drivers on Fedora still needs more steps than it should. Hopefully with the rise of better open source drivers for NVIDIA eventually this will be a thing of the past. That, or the Fedora team just make it easier out of the box. Not a huge downside though, with the right instructions for GPU driver updates you can be done in a couple of minutes.

Handhelds and TV PCs

An addition for this year is the Handheld and TV PCs suggestion, because it's a rapidly growing segment of the market. With the Steam Deck, Legion Go, ROG Ally and many more. That and small form factor PCs for hooking up to your TV - there's need for something a bit different here. You want an experience that's good with controllers.

For all of you, I will definitely suggest you go with Bazzite. It works very similarly to Valve's own SteamOS including booting into Steam Big Picture Mode, but comes with various tweaks and tools to make the experience great across many different devices. It's also updated a lot faster than SteamOS, so fixes and improvements for newer handhelds comes a lot sooner.

You still get a full desktop mode with KDE Plasma too for all your work, web browsing and other uses. Bazzite has been growing nicely through 2025 and I fully expect 2026 to be an even bigger year for it.

I've been using Bazzite on my Lenovo Legion Go with the Z1 Extreme processor and it has been overall really great. Bazzite is a wonderful replacement for Windows on handhelds.


If you need help and support for Linux and Steam Deck gaming, you can try asking in our Discord. Don't forget to follow me on Bluesky and Mastodon too while you're at it.

Don't agree with me? Am I so wrong that you just have to do something about it? Leave a comment below.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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Stella a day ago
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I agree with the overall sentiment on Kubuntu - it works fine for me, and I still run it on the PCs that I don't use for gaming, such as my server PC - but I switched to Bazzite in August on all my devices - AMD Desktop, Nvidia Laptop, Asus Ally X - and have not looked back. It's just so stable and polished and I love it. And annoyances that plagued me on Kubuntu - such as having to manually install Mangohud from script because the repo version is broken - are simply not an issue at all, because Mangohud is preinstalled, along with pretty much everything that you could possibly need for gaming.

Last edited by Stella on 5 Jan 2026 at 4:19 pm UTC
Kimyrielle a day ago
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I used Fedora extensively back in the days, and it's definitely a solid distro. Then again, I firmly believe in that it matters not a single bit what distro you are using for gaming. I can't think of any that doesn't work for the purpose. IMHO, distro choice is mostly determined by what desktop environment the distro is using by default, and if it's one you like.
Carolly a day ago
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Honest question for you, why is it that year after year you stick your nose up in the air over great distros like Nobara, CachyOS, and PikaOS, in favour of large corporate-backed projects? Any of them are excellent distros for gaming and more than just "a few tweaks and a new theme" (and generally they make it very easy to install Nvidia drivers - Nobara and Pika even offer ISOs with the Nvidia drivers preloaded!)

I'm curious if you've tried running any of the three in recent years. You might actually enjoy using them if you gave them a shot.
rustynail a day ago
I think it's a good sign when people recommend Fedora, because I always thought of Fedora as just a collection of vanilla upstream software like Debian and Arch are, so when I hear that Fedora is good I just hear that Linux in general is good
scaine a day ago
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My challenge with Linux distros is that I use my PC for work too, which is a mostly Microsoft outfit. That means I sometimes have to install things for the work environments like Zoom Conferencing. And they often don't offer RPMs. So I completely ignore any RPM distro when I'm hopping.

Currently on Cachy and Garuda (they're both Arch-based), and they're both awesome for gaming, but it's only a matter of time before an update spoils my fun. I don't have the patience to read a forum to know whether an update will brick my PC, so this time around I'm relying on BTRFS and snapper to roll me back when the breakage inevitably happens!

Time will tell if this a reasonable approach.
Liam Dawe a day ago
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Quoting: CarollyHonest question for you, why is it that year after year you stick your nose up in the air over great distros like Nobara, CachyOS, and PikaOS, in favour of large corporate-backed projects? Any of them are excellent distros for gaming and more than just "a few tweaks and a new theme" (and generally they make it very easy to install Nvidia drivers - Nobara and Pika even offer ISOs with the Nvidia drivers preloaded!)

I'm curious if you've tried running any of the three in recent years. You might actually enjoy using them if you gave them a shot.
Because there is usually little point in them outside of niche use cases for people far beyond power users that care about random library optimisations. Most of them do tweaks that 99% of people just don't need. I've also been burned in the past by these fringe distros having all sorts of issues, or just vanishing on you. It's better for normies to stick to the bigger lot, because they're tried and tested with good support overall.
CatKiller a day ago
An annoying downside to Fedora — Installing NVIDIA GPU drivers on Fedora still needs more steps than it should.
Given that most people in need of a "which distro to pick" article are going to be on Nvidia, that's reason enough to not pick Fedora.
rustynail a day ago
An annoying downside to Fedora — Installing NVIDIA GPU drivers on Fedora still needs more steps than it should.
Didn't Fedora fix/bring back the one click nvidia driver installer in the last version? I think I've read that. I only ever used atomic fedora so that wouldn't apply to me anyway but on Workstation it's true iirc
nebadon2025 a day ago
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Sadly for me Fedora has been an awful experience on my nvidia machines, it seems fine with AMD GPUs, but I had an awful time keeping it running for long with an nvidia gpu, the repo kept breaking and causing me a multitude of problems, and since I prefer to keep the same distro on all of my machines, currently 4 desktop workstations and a laptop (2 nvidia/2amd and laptop is hybrid AMD/Nvidia machine), I still have to stick with and recommend Kubuntu.
buono a day ago
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All the big ones are very polished these days. I do have a soft spot for fedora, but like a rolling release so I default to opensuse for family computers that I maintain. Tumbleweed has been bulletproof for me, reliably updating though many hardware changes, recently new motherboard and processor(amd of-course :) ). I have tried moving some over to opensuse kalpa, and that's going well - though they aren't a gamers.
I haven’t used ubuntu based for a long time now but I’m sure they are still great for gaming too.
Going to put endevouros on my ancient laptop, that comes out once in a blue moon to troubleshoot broadband problems, but my main machine is arch of-course :)
¨gaming optimized distros" are the dumbest thing ever, hobby projects that do not contribute anything upstream and do not teach their users anything.
But they are always fast and efficient when they have to setup their patreon...
AsciiWolf a day ago
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Even though I prefer the standard Fedora, I would rather recommend some immutable variant:

[Aurora](https://getaurora.dev), [Bluefin](https://projectbluefin.io) or [Bazzite](https://bazzite.gg). All are great.

Last edited by AsciiWolf on 5 Jan 2026 at 5:20 pm UTC
zkarj a day ago
I use Fedora for personal stuff (address book, photo editing etc.) I started moving Windows games to Fedora to run under wine and others until I no longer needed Windows, and Fedora is now my only gaming platform on a desktop.

I would not switch to another distro given the time investment required, and I'm just glad I started with Fedora early on. It basically has everything I need: Server, desktop, gaming. It may require some tweaking but that's what is expected to get bleeding-edge features with acceptable stability. It has full coverage of software packages and repos I need for my everyday use, including gaming.
syylk a day ago
Quoting: ExplosiveDiarrhea¨gaming optimized distros" are the dumbest thing ever, hobby projects that do not contribute anything upstream and do not teach their users anything.
But they are always fast and efficient when they have to setup their patreon...
Fair point.

My counter-point is Nobara: the freshness of Fedora, nvidia drivers preinstalled (so the largest Fedora roadbump removed), and you cannot find another distro which contributes to Linux gaming more than what Glorious Eggroll does with Proton-GE and umu.

Unless you're Valve, of course.
Cley_Faye a day ago
My opinion on "distributions for gaming" is pretty "old man yells at cloud"ish.

If you have a relatively stable base distro, let's say Ubuntu (there's arguments to be had there too…), why bother switching to a different one that might or might not be based on your base, just because some stuff is preinstalled?

I get the "it's more streamlined" argument for some pieces of software, but as far as distribution goes, my main goal is pick one on which I can do whatever. When I hear "this is preinstalled on this distro" or "that is pre-configure on that distro", all I hear is that you could just run a script (let's make it a graphic-based executable that you one-click download somewhere…) to get to the same state, plus keeping your known base under it. Plus plus keeping whatever support you provide to open source projects and services less spread out.

When a friend came to me about PopOS telling me "now I can switch between the integrated GPU or the Nvidia one in one click!" I put my ubuntu laptop in his face, clicked on "nvidia-prime" in the menu, where I had that exact same feature.

Sorry, sorry, I'm rambling. But I'm quite annoyed at the plethora of "new distro" that are basically another one in a trench coat with a pretty hat. That's spreading resources, and large open source software are not exactly rolling in free resources, as far as I know.

Last edited by Cley_Faye on 5 Jan 2026 at 5:57 pm UTC
clatterfordslim a day ago
I've just setup Linux Mint Xfce Edition for gaming through Steam, with a low latency Kernel, plus uninstalled stuff I don't need, like Linux Mint themes and their icon themes, because I have my own dedicated theme for Xfce. I'm dual booting with Xubuntu 24.04 and am going to install Flatpaks on it, getting rid of Snapd altogether. All that Xubuntu will be for is playing my PlayStation 2 games, that I turned into ISO's for PCSX2 to read. You can game on any Linux Distro, just make sure your hardware is up to it. To play triple A games, like The Last of Us Part 1 and 2 which both had a really bad port to PC. You need hardware wise Processor with eight cores sixteen threads, 32GB of Rammage and a dedicated NVIDIA or AMD card with 16GB or more of VRAM. The Last of Us ports were really bad though and unfortunately they do not run very well in Proton, even at low settings because these ports were rushed in my opinion. Yet any other PlayStation ported game runs really well in Proton. I'm waiting for the day when there will only be one proton version to cover everything, no matter what hardware.
Don't agree with me? Am I so wrong that you just have to do something about it? Leave a comment below.
EndeavourOS KDE (or maybe Garuda? I love their browser.) with BTRFS snapshots, on the edge with almost no risk; without being on the edge you won't be getting the quick raytracing/performance improvements until potentially 6 months later. :P

That's enough said, clearly, I win.
Carolly a day ago
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Quoting: ExplosiveDiarrhea¨gaming optimized distros" are the dumbest thing ever, hobby projects that do not contribute anything upstream and do not teach their users anything.
But they are always fast and efficient when they have to setup their patreon...
Because nobody at all uses Proton-GE patches or Cachy kernel optimizations amirite?
scaine a day ago
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Quoting: Carolly
Quoting: ExplosiveDiarrhea¨gaming optimized distros" are the dumbest thing ever, hobby projects that do not contribute anything upstream and do not teach their users anything.
But they are always fast and efficient when they have to setup their patreon...
Because nobody at all uses Proton-GE patches or Cachy kernel optimizations amirite?
CachyOS is pretty neat. It handles full-disk encryption really nicely (Endeavour offered it, but it was super-slow to unlock the disk), and it has an app that installs things like Snapper and can update your system, or mirrors. I've been pretty impressed by it so far.

Meanwhile, Garuda has a nice feature to install chaotic-AUR, so you get the benefits of the AUR without having to wait around for compiling to happen.

Obviously, if you know what you're doing with Linux, you can probably do everything these distros do on any base. But since I'm not that savvy (despite two decades on Linux), I appreciate these distros for what they offer.
Caldathras a day ago
I'm quite happy with Linux Mint myself.

I tried rolling / semi-rolling distros for a while. The constant updates kept destabilizing my game installs. I finally got frustrated and decided to give my daily driver distro a try as a gaming O/S. The only thing I changed was the desktop environment. I went with XFCE instead of Cinnamon. I have been quite happy with the stability I've gained.

Tried Fedora once. It was just too unfamiliar an environment for me, despite the intuitiveness of KDE Plasma.
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