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Remember, kids: All guesses, zero coherence = bs
Definitely Not GustavoM. :^)
Remember, kids: All guesses, zero coherence = bs
You could always… you know… buy either a “work-only” PC (something like a Orange pi 5 max) or a “Windows PC” to play these games?
t. Got three “computers” with different functions and I’m about to have a 4th one.
“Oh, look! One(1) game has been busted by the devs themselves and because of that, Linux gaming is dead as ever!”
lmao what
Either by checking $HOME/.bash_profile or the wm’s config file (which is very likely to be at $HOME/.config).
t. I only do minimal installs.
It could be (pretty much) any distro you want – considering scripts like armbian-gaming exists and can give you a “one stop shop” experience.
Why running scripts like these instead of downloading the “real thing”? When you have “obscure”/unsupported sbcs and you need to “make your own” version of it.
A separate /home partition means you can set $ROOTFS as read-only (and /home as rw) and have a “pseudo-everlasting but not really” file system.
(And before someone says “Why not simply disable logs instead? It’s the same thing.” – yes, yes it is. But sometimes you want a “just werks” solution, even if it is a dumb one. Which is (obviously) disabling writes all over $ROOTFS.)
Just remember that “Linux is not Windows” and to “go in” like It’s your very first time using a PC and you’ll be fine.
It can be (pretty much) any distro you want – just make a minimal install, install the stuff you want, pull config files from your github and throw em in $HOME, that’s it.
Unplayable on Linux and good on Linux?
My Dear Scott!