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Linux is now the best gaming system. | fernvenue's Blog
blog.fernvenue.comWhen it comes to gaming on Linux, many many many people’s understanding stil remains in the Jurassic era. For the past few years, I’ve been using Linux as my main operating system for both work and gaming. From my personal experience, the gaming experience on Linux is far superior to that of macOS and Windows. I know I know…whenever I mention this, there are always some old-school individuals who come out to say that Linux’s driver configuration is complex, its game support is not rich enough, and its compatibility issues are significant, among other problems. In this article, I will directly address these issues and let everyone understand how much the gaming experience on Linux has developed by 2025.
I am on the record saying that having to copy/paste one line to terminal isn’t the dealbreaker most people say it is.
Weirdly, your attempt to argue against it shows the real problem.
Normies won’t distro-hop across five options to find the one that works, they maaaaybe will install one thing once by clicking “Next” through the installer. If it doesn’t work after clicking all the Next buttons then it doesn’t work. Normies won’t add a repo, GUI or CLI. If the app is not in the “store” (or if you can’t click a button on a website to install it), then it’s not supported. Normies don’t care if it’s an Nvidia or a Linux problem. If their expensive GPU works on Windows but not on Linux, then Windows works and Linux doesn’t.
It’s weird to me how warped this conversation is top to bottom. It really is that one XKCD comic turned into a lifestyle.
And that’s why I keep it simple with my recommendations: install Mint (any flavor that looks nice). It has the driver detection app already installed, it can install debs, and the package repository has a very good selection. Tons of people use it, so community support is good.
The vast majority of users can get up and running by only using the GUI. That’s pretty good.