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Should i wait till SteamOS i fully rleeased for desktop enviroment? I keep hearing SteamOS might get a huge upgrade for the hardware release and possible HL3 ( hey i can dream can't i ? :) or jusy go with CachyOS right now?
I think i just want CachyOS or Gardua (gaming version) or steamOS if the new one is really good. I run a 7900XT AMD card and an older 5800X3D so all AMD which seems to do better on linux, right?
How do updates work for critical software like i was rerading a new version of KDE. Can an working install of cachyOS upgrade to a newer version ok KDE?
What built in software is best for back up if i make a mistake?
so
CachyOS
Brtfs
Limine
KDE Desktop
does that sound right?
I do a lot of gaming when i have the time and use Mod Organizer 2 for Skyrim Fallout 4 No mans sky etc. do i have to run that through Wine?
Also do i have to reinstall all my games or can i just move them to another partion then back to the orginal partiotn now using BTRFS or can i convert NTFS to BRTFS some how?
thank for reading this and responding if you can. Thank a million!
I can't speak to CachyOS (others here can), but, in my experience, Arch-based distros are typically best for intermediate users even when they say they are for beginners. SteamOS is a specialty OS designed for handhelds, not desktops.
Have you taken a look at Bazzite? It has a desktop version and is available with the KDE Plasma desktop. It is based on Fedora immutable (meaning that it is less likely to damage the core OS).
After toying with Manjaro and a number of other KDE-based distros, I went back to Linux Mint. I use Linux Mint XFCE for gaming.
GNOME-based desktop environments cannot create desktop shortcuts. From personal experience, KDE Plasma and Cinnamon can create them. Not sure about XFCE -- I haven't tried. I organize and run my games with a game manager now (Steam, Heroic, Lutris, etc.)
I use Timeshift for backups, myself. For heftier jobs, I use Clonezilla (not built-in). I'm not sure how well Timeshift would work with BTRFS.
I run portable installations of Mod Organizer 2 from within WINE, in the same prefix as the game. I have heard that there is a "global" Linux version but I have not tried it.
Yes, you will have to reinstall your games. Most Linux gamers like to put each game into its own WINE prefix. Steam, Heroic and Lutris do this automatically. Most Windows games have registry settings that are set during the installation process. Better to have the installer do this for you than try to do it manually. Backup your game saves (Steam does this automatically for any Steam games), record where they were located, and place them at the same location within the prefix (again, not necessary with Steam games).
To my knowledge, it is not possible to convert an NTFS partition into a BTRFS partition. You would need to copy your data over from one to the other.
Last edited by Caldathras on 15 Feb 2026 at 7:23 pm UTC
I personally use Manjaro KDE Stable which is Arch, but with more testing done with packages and not so up to date. Though usage of AUR with it can cause breakage that is not recommended though. Linux Mint probably also suits noobs, but comes with X11 so multi monitor stuff is not so nice if you have to use scaling.
I left the distro for two reasons. The first was Manjaro's very poor support for legacy Nvidia GPUs (and their rather arrogant response to those that complained). I had a Kepler series GPU. The final straw was the Manjaro team's decision to force telemetry tracking on their users.
Incidentally, when I moved from Manjaro to Pop!_OS, I discovered that Arch WINE prefixes are not compatible with Ubuntu WINE. Had to reinstall all my games from scratch. Pop!_OS 22.04 was were I learned about the GNOME desktop shortcut issue.
I guess I should correct that to "GNOME-based desktop environments cannot create desktop shortcuts by default" then. The GNOME Extension Manager was a pain in the butt to work with in Pop!_OS 22.04.
I can't speak to Pop!_OS 24.04 as I haven't updated yet, but, in my opinion, Pop!_OS 22.04 is another great starter distro for gamers. I just learned to adapt to launching games from the Application launcher and, later, a game management tool (at that time, Lutris), instead of the desktop.
I switched to Linux Mint XFCE only because several GoL members spoke so highly of it (they weren't wrong) and Pop!_OS had gotten temporarily behind on their Nvidia driver updates (I didn't know about the graphics driver PPA at that time -- thanks for that, Liam!).
Linux Mint is especially good for former Windows users as the interface is very similar to what they are familiar with from the Windows ecosystem. That being said, KDE Plasma has a very easy learning curve. It doesn't take long to figure it out. What I like most about Linux Mint is the helpful user community and the dev team itself.
Last edited by Caldathras on 16 Feb 2026 at 6:42 pm UTC