While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Login / Register
- Steam Deck most played for April 2024 has plenty of Fallout
- Bazzite 3.0 out now with Steam Deck OLED support nearly ready
- The big hit medieval strategy game Manor Lords works well on Linux
- Zink driver startup time squashed with new patches
- Albion Online now officially launched in Europe and MENA regions
- > See more over 30 days here
-
HELLDIVERS 2 will soon actually require a PlayStation N…
- Pengling -
HELLDIVERS 2 will soon actually require a PlayStation N…
- Linux_Rocks -
HELLDIVERS 2 will soon actually require a PlayStation N…
- Pengling -
SteamVR Beta gets Linux fixes, plus Beta updates for De…
- chr -
Men of War II releases May 15th with Linux support
- Fremen - > See more comments
Latest Forum Posts
- How to run 32-bit games without 32-bit libraries (Wine thunking)?…
- Shmerl - Hi, i need help with wine read access denied issue.
- Caldathras - Weekend Players' Club 5/3/2024
- Pengling - Weekend Players' Club 4/26/2024
- Mezron - Playing PUBG on Steam-Linux
- Talon1024 - See more posts
View PC info
Would never recommend Antergos though as for whatever reason it chews through resources/runs slow in comparison to Manjaro or Arcolinux.
View PC info
The developers of Antergos announced that they were quitting, so that's not a good idea.
View PC info
I've been using Arch since 2009 because I got cheesed off with the 6 monthly Ubuntu upgrade and having stale packages. It's nice to see other Arch users chime in saying they've had few problems, I thought I was the only one having it easy
And I mean very few problems, all of which were sorted quickly and easily. I had much bigger problems running Ubuntu but then I didn't really know what I was doing until I installed and set up Arch from scratch.
I would say try it in a VM first, if you're hesitant. Even if you decide against it, you'll probably still learn something new. I'm by no means any kind of advanced computer user but getting to grips with the basics really set me up nicely for using Linux in general. I love knowing exactly what I've installed and what I'm running (roll my own DE, window manager plus select components). There's always a fully blown DE a quick install away to hold your hand if you want that.
I can't comment on any of the other distros because I've never tried any of them! There is nothing with Arch I think could be be better to warrant me trying something else. And compiling stuff is an absolute doddle with the AUR and PKGBUILDs, so simple and elegant.
That's my experience anyway. The freedom of choice and variety of Linux is wonderful.
Tried Antergos, but Plasma was very unstable on it, to the point I had to give up.
Switched to Manjaro. Plasma was fine, so I decided to stick with it. I'm using for about a year (maybe more?) and my system broke at least twice.
First time cuz I was messing with NVIDIA stuff. The second one was caused by an update, which later I saw in the news with instructions on how to fix it (downgrading a certain package, via chroot, did it with the very same Live USB I used to install Manjaro).