Anyone know if the save games are compatible with the original?
The funniest part is their claim that people were being salty and should chill, at a time when there were almost no comments, and none were salty. Bot?
For reference, even Deban Stable has been at glibc 2.31 or newer for three major versions now, and another major version is on its way this year. I don’t think this will affect many people.
Then whomever tested it “to death” wasn’t particularly comprehensive. I speak from more than a little personal experience.
Of course it won’t help in every case, nor did I claim it would. That’s not the point, and your contrarianism doesn’t help anyone. Good day.
Lots of people comment on this subject pointing out that some games don’t run on Linux, and conclude that Linux is still behind Windows. This fails to recognize a distinct advantage that Linux has: More efficient use of hardware.
If your system doesn’t have an especially fast SSD or lots of RAM, you might find that Linux gives a better gaming experience. It can often do more with less.
Edit to add: When I consider the fact that we’re mostly talking about games designed and built just for Windows, I find this really damn impressive. And it just keeps getting better.
Anti-cheat is allowed. There are a handful of anti-cheat systems that can’t work on Linux, but IIRC, they are in the minority.
I think you can set the WINEDEBUG=+eventlog
environment variable to make Windows Event Log entries appear on stderr (the standard error stream). You can normally see this output if you run Steam from a terminal window. You may be able to redirect it to a file using Steam launch options, but I’ve never tried it.
The log is a plain text file. No special viewer needed.
Environment Variable | Description |
---|---|
PROTON_LOG |
Convenience method for dumping a useful debug log to $PROTON_LOG_DIR/steam-$APPID.log . Set to 1 to enable default logging, or set to a string to be appended to the default WINEDEBUG channels. |
PROTON_LOG_DIR |
Output log files into the directory specified. Defaults to your home directory. |
https://github.com/ValveSoftware/Proton/#runtime-config-options
I know I didn’t put adaptive in there, but that is what I meant when I said the triggers don’t work.
Yes, I understood, but I wanted to clarify for the sake of other readers who wouldn’t. Most people who don’t have a DualSense don’t know about its adaptive triggers, since they’re not a common feature on game controllers and not used by most games.
And how do you get the touchpad to work? I can get the buttons on it to work, but I haven’t gotten the mouse-like touch input to actually work, despite being able to map it.
On the desktop, I didn’t have to do a thing. It was automatically recognized when I connected the device, and I could move the mouse pointer and click right away. (I ended up disabling it in Xfce, because it sometimes got in my way.)
In Steam, I usually remap areas of it to produce keyboard events (useful in Elite Dangerous), but I think it can also be mapped as a mouse. I haven’t fiddled with Steam Input’s many options in a while.
Indeed, but I didn’t comment on audio, and you didn’t specify the other bits in your original comment. Triggers (without Sony’s proprietary variable resistance), gyro, and touchpad all work fine over bluetooth.
Most games require the DualSense to be physically plugged in to use the triggers, gyro, touchpad,
Most games? Not in my experience. Perhaps that’s because I mostly play on Steam (which has Steam Input to map those things as I like) and console emulators.
I was referring to the image-only link and the embed that you suggested. Sorry if that wasn’t clear.
Neither of those is a good approach, because part of every xkcd comic is the hover text.
I often sit at a desk all day and all evening. I find that these things help:
Its an actual term
It’s a phrase coined very recently based on a misconception, and happened to be picked up by some online publishers. That’s all.
Saying “its an actual term” [sic] just attempts to give it an air of legitimacy, without actually meaning anything.
The phrase itself is not only ignorant, but also insulting. The gamers it refers to are not Baby Boomers, but Generation X, which had nothing to do with the damage to society that Boomers are famous for and most of us in younger generations are suffering from now. (Housing crisis and out-of-touch legislators, for example.)
A game category made up by people who think “boomer” means “anyone more than a few years older than me”.
Unfortunately, that’s not effective against modern bots, since an LLM can easily solve such puzzles.
It also favors people who script notifications or spend their days on social media in order to hoard game codes, rather than giving people who would actually play the game a fair chance. I don’t know if this has become common on Lemmy yet, but it was very common on Reddit.
This site does detailed reviews, including measurements, photos, and comparisons:
https://www.rtings.com/monitor
https://www.rtings.com/review-pipeline/monitor
https://www.rtings.com/vote/monitor
This one is good for digging up details about specific models, such as what panel is used or where it was made, also with comparisons:
https://www.displayspecifications.com/
Simon over at TFTCentral used to do the best monitor reviews. Sadly, he quietly replaced his site with an OLED-focused blog a few years ago, perhaps because catering to gamers with disposable income makes more money. Nevertheless, he knows what he’s talking about when it comes to displays, his tech articles are still good (if you can find them on the new site), and he might still review IPS models once in a while:
https://tftcentral.co.uk/
For me, IPS beats OLED, because:
I haven’t been following display news in the past year or so, but when I was, LG.Display’s “IPS Black” panels were on their way to market with a promise of higher contrast ratios than traditional IPS. I think Dell or HP were going to use them. By now, more of their kind might exist.
When I was last shopping for a 27" gaming/productivity display, I narrowed it down to the Asus ROG Strix XG27AQMR, Dell G2724D, and Acer Predator XB273U V3bmiiprx. That was roughly a year ago. I don’t know if those models are still on the market, or if better ones are available now.