*char // I heard it from a friend
**char //who heard it from a friend
***char // who heard it from another
"You were messing around"
*char // I heard it from a friend
**char //who heard it from a friend
***char // who heard it from another
"You were messing around"
In the end, clearing my shader cache seemed to fix it
In the event someone else runs into this, go Steam>Settings>Downloads>uncheck “Enable Shader Pre-Caching” then check it again
Nevermind, still poor performance
The interface “running” is one thing, but does it know to run games in wine/proton? Does it know to grab the Linux versions of games if available? Mono doesn’t make that automatic.
Does this work well on Linux? Looks like it’s dotnet based
Also, the readme says it requires windows
It’s not on flathub, so it won’t show up in discover.
Generally, it doesn’t have command line programs, just gui ones
There are only two system partitions, you might only have to make the change twice
It’s surprisingly unreliable. We have had frequent issues (once every two weeks or so), with peripherals suddenly stopping to work for no apparent reason, or the system being slowed waaaay down. Turning it off and on again worked most of the time, but that is not something I expected from a Linux-based machine.
I think this might be an issue with the official dock. I’ve got a third party dock that’s a lot more stable. The biggest problem I have here is that the port not being thunderbolt or usb-4 limits your dock options a lot
Regarding difficulty,
The difficulty of this game is sort of what you make of it. If you’re struggling, try out a different build and try to incorporate some spells. Farming runes can go a long way to gradually making the game easier
I didn’t have this experience? TIL
To be fair, all of that was in the course of less than a week, and I neither heavily use nor customize my personal laptop, so it’s likely that if there are issues, I didn’t encounter them.
Even so, I was quite impressed with how simple and seamless it was for me.
I installed kinoite on my laptop. Rebased to silverblue for a while to try out gnome, rebased to kinoite rawhide to check out kde plasma 6, then back to kinoite 39. I think a few minor settings had to be redone, but no real issues.
Sure, but in both cases it installs the flatpak version that distributes the codecs with the runtime.
Although, now that I say this, I did install the flathub repo on fedora, which does slightly undermine my point
I’ve used both, and the only third party repo I’ve enabled was tailscale. I’ve not had any issue with needing codecs in anything I’ve Installed through the discover app. I’ll admit that I don’t have an Nvidia card, so I don’t know how good support is ootb there (though iirc, at least openSUSE has a separate installer that include Nvidia drivers)
I think your best bet for this is one of the spinoffs of enterprise Linux: fedora or openSUSE. both are very solid ootb, and have starting configurations that are generally good.
The microos or silverblue variants respectively are really promising as well, but still have some caveats.
Maybe it’s the sequel to that which came out a week ago
Yup, Kalpa upgrade was easy
That’s the fun part of kalpa. Get to upgrade confidently. Though it does take a quick reboot to actually apply
Same time as Tumbleweed
Soon™️
You should update your kernel at least once every 10 years
Before killing yourself, it’s your responsibility to kill your children