Yes, I meant NieR:Automata.
I must admit that my process at the time has been installing Linux, installing Steam, playing a bunch of games and eventually wanting to play NieR:A, not seeing it in the available games and going back to Windows.
Maybe I ought to try again. 2026 might just be MY year of Linux on the desktop ;)
@axnxcamr @hazelnot @misty oh, dear, I had thought stepping out of the cave was a joke, because yes it's *very* much a thing now.
It's so much a thing that DXVK exists about it, and by extension Proton has become a shockingly viable target for games, especially with Valve's investment in this market segment.
Yeah, sorry to disapoint.
I've been a server room Linux user for decades, but all my attempts to switch my desktop have failed. I'm not a huge gamer either so I usually get the news after they are pretty cold.
I beat the Ender Dragon for the first time last Christmas.
I'm currently playing Dragon Warrior IV on the NES, not with an emulator.
I do kind of live in a cave.
@axnxcamr no disappointment, I'm just happy to share the very good news and regret not doing so sooner!
Gaming on Linux is absolutely having a moment, and combined with the alarmingly rapid fall of Windows, things are getting kind of weird in a good way.
s/strange/glorious/
I think the only real areas where that isn't true are competitive games with kernel level anti-cheats.
But also those games and the gamers that play them kinda suck, so... Good?
It was inevitable. I've used Linux on my laptop for ten years, and seen it get closer and closer to game-ability all this time. Paying for an OS? Being forced to be injected with bloated updates? These issues haven't affected me again, ever.
It's not absurd, because open-source had been working towards replacing corporate, in ALL aspects, since it's inception.
Since coders woke up to discover their code was being monetized, then weaponized, then monopolized against their creators.
This was inevitable. Enjoy your gaming.😏
@misty recently, l was setting up a new laptop, and ended up with fedora linux (and a windows vm), just to not deal with missing device drivers. I expected literally opposite, but no
(Working Autocad & Revit was a must, and they're still too much for Wine/Proton)
@misty Peripheral support is good but still iffy around the edges. Say, if you're a trans girl who wants to deepen the Mechsploitation-shaped hole in her brain by playing Mech games with a HOTAS setup.
(Purely hypothetical, I don't assure you)