I don’t spend much time on my desktop computer but if I do I tend to game a bit. OW II, CS, Helldivers, Tabletop Simulator mostly. And of course need Discord.
I am considering a minor upgrade to the hardware and would need a fresh install (currently Win 10). I’ve been out of the distro game for a while and currently only have one old thinkpad running Debian and an X1 Carbon gen7 I want to use for experimentating/ distro hopping.
I want a daily driver OS that can play games. I also edit photos and might to the odd “flash a CFW to an old phone” or similar light tasks. Where do I start?
I hear PopOS because “it just works” but also CachyOS because “performance, muh”.
I have experience with Ubuntu (first was 6.06) and Fedora mostly but have played around with a lot that came with at least a barebones UI (crunchbang anyone?). My life has changed so I have less time to nerd out with this than I used to. But I feel the itch to experiment now and maybe use Linux on my main desktop again after some years with that mentioned upgrade soon.
Bazzite is where it’s at for gaming. Even more stable than PopOS and runs games very well out of the box.
And the download page is so simple
Loving Bazzite so far! I think I’ll make the switch on the desktop rig too
Glad to hear! :)
Interesting, I’ll have a look! Any ad-hoc comments why it’s better than Cachy OS?
Generally; CachyOS is Arch Linux, which means all the good sides and down sides of Arch.
Bazzite is universal-blue. Which is immutable Fedora. You can’t really mess around with the system. You install software via flatpak, everything is a very controlled environment.
Thanks, that’s a great explanation! So in my terms, Bazzite is what I should consider for my daily driver, CachyOS might be worth fiddling around with on my “just for fun” thinkpad :)
Depending how familiar and comfortable you are with linux, that could be right.
Bazzite is a dependable experience that you setup it up to do a job and just use it. Tinkering around with it isn’t really a thing.
CachyOS being basically Arch with some performance based modifications is absolutely for tinkering with, customising, learning to get under the hood with Linux… but also very breakable.
How does it compare to nobara?
Way more reliable, and just as optimized for out of the box gaming.