Article has some observation about the new statistics provided by Steam-Hardware-Software-Survey-Welcome-to-Steam.
The Steam on Linux marketshare ended 2024 with a 2.29% against Windows at 96.1% and macOS at 1.61%. The Steam Survey numbers for January were posted this evening and they show a sizable dip for the Linux gaming use but there are also other odd discrepancies with the updated monthly figures.
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Where things get odd though is that the January results show the English language use dropping by 8.17% down to 33.97%… Most other languages dropping too and no explanation where the 8%+ usage went from the English use.
My bad, both my Linux pcs on different distros black screened after updating so I had to go back to using windows.
nvidia user? there’s been issues between nvidia drivers and kernel 6.12, i experienced that too. fixed by going back to an older kernel.
Try fedora. More stability than any other os I’ve ever tried. Have had it running on all my machines for maybe 6 years now and not one issue, including with gaming (csgo/cs2 for 5k+ hours).
That usually don’t happen. Hopefully you did not lose any personal data. What distributions were you using? I wonder what happened there, that both of your different distributions had a black screen after an update.
First bazzite then Ubuntu 3 months later. Tried troubleshooting but gave up and started over. I don’t bother backing up my steam machines, but I appreciate the concern.
I don’t understand the hype with Bazzite. I mean, any linux is better than windows and Bazzite is just linux with bloat and a bad one at that.
my experience with Bazzite: install, use LACT to attemp a small overclock, crash, reboot, lots of packagers missing from distro, uninstall, went back to vanilla Arch.
immutable distros are just a hype and nothing more.
for me the biggest dealbreaker is that only flatpaks are available
You can layer packages using
rpm-ostree install $pkgname
. It uses fedora repos. You can also (preferably) use a distrobox or toolbox container with a non-atomic distro and then install the desired package. Generally better to avoid layering packages but it works fine in my experience.