https://github.com/ublue-os/countme/blob/main/growth_global.svg

Graphs can be found here on their github. Since around mid November the active user count for Bazzite has gone up by around 16k active users.

Personally, my only wish for Bazzite is a Cosmic version 👼 I tried it out recently and it seems fairly impressive

  • Ugurcan@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I’ve been using Bazzite for a while and mostly happy with it. So from 2026 and on, I’ll start donating a Windows license amount of money to Bazzite and other fundementals every year. Because fuck Windows, that’s why.

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    It’s amazing. Everything works perfectly, all my favorite games run smooth and gnome is amazing.

    I left Linux 10 years ago because I didn’t have the time to maintain a system.

    Now it’s less work than Windows to set everything up

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    I ended up with CachyOS over Bazzite but I’m looking into the latter for my dad since I’m guessing it’s more stable and easier.

    I just… Idk, I like Arch over Fedora. I blame the little pacman eating my progress whenever I install stuff in konsole. Desktop mode to desktop mode it’s the same KDE Plasma I’d be using, though. Are there any other striking differences between Cachy and Bazzite?

    Edit: it was good to bring it up here, y’all are very knowledgeable on these things. It sounds to me that I need to get bazzite for my dad mostly because he won’t want to fuss or work on it and that I made the right call for myself since Cachy (and Arch in general) gives more flexibility. Frankly I might not even give him desktop mode default, he strictly wants something to play from bed in full on retirement mode.

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      AFAIK CachyOS still demands a little involvement in the OS. Like, you have to watch the logs when you update, you need keep context in mind, like knowing you’re running KDE and an Nvidia card and so on. But I feel like Bazzite would be more usable to someone who doesn’t know (and doesn’t need to know) what a filesystem or a discrete GPU are.

      But in terms of stability, CachyOS has been rock solid for me. The cadence that Arch + CachyOS devs fix stuff has been utterly perfect.

      So I say if your dad is more ‘software curious,’ give him CachyOS. If he doesn’t like messing with computer stuff, give him Bazzite.

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        It’s unfortunate that years as a tech guy at his job has made him less software curious, so probably bazzite then. Rather, I guess when it’s your job to fix things, tinkering isn’t fun anymore.

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          i’d recommend aurora, it is from the same team that made bazzite, and is literally just bazzite but without the gaming apps preinstalled, focused more on average pc users

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          I second this, it’s why I went with Bazzite on my main rig - it just needs to work and be reliable. The last thing I want to be doing in my spare time is funking around trying to fix anything that happens to break.

          All my other devices run whatever I feel like so I can scratch that curiosity-itch but they get reinstalled if anything major breaks and I can’t fix it in a reasonable amount of time

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          Ah.

          Well one catch I’ve found outside of CachyOS is that if something isn’t working right, it’s easy to create a ton of work for yourself trying to fix it. An example would be fighting your system trying to roll a package forward for a fix, which then gets out of sync with your distro, which requires more manual fixing since you’re the one maintaining it now…

          The Arch/Cachy ecosystem, on the other hand, tends to encourage more usage of system packages, and fixes stuff quick. Usually waiting a day or a few days + a pacman -Syyuu fixes what was wrong.

          If your Dad is a software engineer, it’s possible he might fall into that trap with Bazzite. It kinda just depends on his habits/personality, though from what you describe this may not be a huge danger.

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            Him 20-30 years ago probably would have. This is a man who, when I was a kid, made a custom UI for msdos so my brother and I could play games easier. He wouldn’t just tinker, he’d probably be contributing.

            Old age and alcoholism has kind of robbed him of that, though. At this point he’ll probably just ask me to fix it if it goes wrong, lol

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      I went from Arch to Fedora idk, I think over a decade ago and haven’t looked back, not sure how things are nowadays, but I switched again this year from Fedora to Bazzite and I love it. Sure, you’ve got to learn to do things a little differently, but so far it’s been great. And it forced me to use distrobox, which honestly I should have done sooner, it’s absolutely great.

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      I’ve been using Fedora for while but I decided to try Bazzite and for the most part it’s been a great out of the box experience. I didn’t have to mess with NVidia and Wayland as much as I did with vanilla Fedora.

      It is a little wonky compared to other distros. I don’t like the way some features are managed, but for a new non-Linux user, they won’t know the difference. I highly recommend it for people that just want to jump on Steam and go.

      • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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        The problem with a new user is they need more documentation and more resources which atomic distros like bazzite have less of. Making them worse.

        Bazzite is for knowledgeable users who don’t want to tinker much anymore or children who aren’t allowed to modify their computer.

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          Most people don’t want to tinker. They just want a machine that works without hassle or need to think much about how everything works, or risk breaking something… But also without the bloat or the walled garden of Apple.

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          That’s a good point overall and definitely something to consider.

          However, I don’t think it applies to Bazzite specifically because they’ve had such a meteoric growth rise in popularity over the last year. They have more resources to make that stuff.

          But, I don’t think most people in modern hardware need to do much for Bazzite to get going. I think unless they want to play Windows games, they shouldn’t need to do anything weird.

          Bazzite handled all the annoying setup for Wayland and the Nvidia drivers. Bazzite also manages the updates without a user needing to know how the terminal works. (I personally don’t like that, but it’s probably good for new users).

          Bazzite also has fairly robust documentation, which is probably not the case for most Atomic Distros. They also have pretty decent support on social media and in their discord server.

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            Bazzite also manages the updates without a user needing to know how the terminal works. (I personally don’t like that, but it’s probably good for new users).

            Should be noted that this is entirely optional. I update manually through the terminal with “ujust update”

    • MrScottyTay@sh.itjust.works
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      I’m in the same boat, my main gaming pc is still bazzite for now (I use it like a HTPC) but eventually when i can be bothered I’ll be on cachy os as I’ve really enjoyed being able to use the arch-iness on my other devices that have it.

    • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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      Honestly it’s pretty easy to decide if you should use cachy or bazzite.

      Do you use your PC for anything more then office PC or console? If yes pick cachy. If no pick bazzite.

      Atomic is great till you have to do fucking anything then it’s more effort then it’s worth basically instantly. And iv seen more people break bazzite trying to do basic shit then iv seen cachy randomly explode because “arch is unstable”.

      Bazzite is not a home user desktop os, no atomic os is. The entire concept is basically designed for locked down office PCs and consoles where you don’t actually do anything with the PC but use it.

      If your giving a PC to a elderly family member, a child, you do actual business on it that’s mission critical. Bazzite is fucking fantastic, so long as you also never give the admin password to the user.

      Seriously the entire atomic concept really is… Baffling tho… Its best use case is one that doesn’t really exist in the same context as gaming unless it’s a console. It’s baffling that bazzite is as popular as it is. If not for the simple fact there is an absurd amount of misinformation around arch and really Linux in general.

      Because people cling to out of date knowledge from a decade ago because of memes.

      Really 9 times out of 10 normal fedora is better for most avg users then cachy or bazzite.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        Just not true. You can do nearly everything on Bazzite that you can do on other distros, there’s sometimes just a different (often easier) process to do it.

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        I’m no expert but I didn’t have any trouble compiling and running a native Linux FPS game in an Arch distrobox on bazzite to test a bugfix.

        I’m just good enough with Linux to know my way around and to break stuff when I have unfettered access to mess with the base system. Bazzite saves me from myself.

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        I think the most important advice is to use a separate disk/SSD for your home directory so if you screw something up or if you want to change directions, you don’t lose your files. Some of my vendor contracts actively require that I do just this.

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        If someone has to try and break into Bazzite to do anything (if they’re not a developer) then they’re doing something very wrong.

        What the hell were they even trying to do!?

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      4 days ago

      What’s so special about this? Aside from the immutable thingy, of course.

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        Probably the fact that they have many ISOs tailored for each supported hardware configuration, and they point the user to the right ISO with a clear wizard in their download page.

        Also basically it is an unbreakable gaming focused OS very close to SteamOS, that you don’t have to maintain, and it comes preconfigured with Steam and the right drivers for your setup. I’m not the target audience, but I see the appeal.

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          This, so much. I tried pop_os, mint, ubuntu, and more, but all had the problem that when I had an hour to play games, It became 55min of troubleshooting some random issue and not playing because of it.

          With Bazzite i can finally use linux and just boot, play a game, shutdown. No hassle.

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            I think this is one of the big steps that make Linux gaming more accessible to the general public. Proton was clearly the first major step and Bazzite might be the second one.

            • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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              Agreed, when SteamOS gets more general hardware supporty things will get interesting, but Bazzite is a desktop with superlative Steam support, while SteamOS is more a steam console with desktop support. When people, especially newbs, want to do desktop things with their general purpose machines, on SteamOS they’re using Arch (bleeding edge, lower stability), while Bazzites get Fedora (sharp edge, higher stability and security) which should be a less painful and frustrating experience. Of course if there’s a flatpak (possibly the third step) it’ll be painless on either, and hey, everybody wins (except winblows) in either case.

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                Cachy/endeavour is literally more stable from updates than other options at this point.

                Every distro is equally breakable by the user so that’s a moot point to compare them.

                Which is the whole point of atomic distros to fix that point.

                You literally should basically be going bazzite if you don’t want immutable go arch. In the context of gaming.

                Like 90% of the problems over the last 3 years I see new users have is that they try a Ubuntu family distro and run head first into the shit show of how out of date they are and how shitty ppas are.

                • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                  I switched a year or two ago to Bazzite from EOS, and it (EOS) broke all of the time during large updates. If I went more than a week without updating, it was almost guaranteed to break. I used TimeShift all of the time out of necessity. I’ve only needed to rollback my Bazzite install once, and that was because I fucked it up. The rollback process was also incredibly easy

                • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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                  Eh, I did 4 or 5 years on Arch, broke a lot, learned a lot, got tired of that and retired to Fedora, now Bazzite. I would recommend Arch or Cachy to someone with technical chops, which is a surprising amount of PC gamers, who wants to get up to speed fast on linux. I’ll recommend ArchWiki regardless. Then there are the others who just want to game with minimal friction, for them, Bazzite. Horses for courses… Hard agree on Ubuntu.

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          This is why I chose it. Gaming living room computer that kids can’t easily break. It just worked. Well, except for my idea to dual boot and have games pulling from an ntfs hdd. Bazzite hated that idea. So if you’re using bazzite, make sure your games are on a Linux partition. Even though Linux is ok with ntfs for some reason beyond my expertise… Games do not like it.

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            Steam tends to have massive issues with permissions for games on NTFS partitions. You might’ve run into that.

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              I second this, had the exact same issue but on Arch back in February. But luckily windows can be made to play nice with non-NTFS drives.

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        It just works. It works better than Windows 11 in my experience. I can’t break it. I forget it’s there. I just do computer stuff. Like video editing, gaming, web browsing.

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        The immutable thing is nice, though it takes some getting used to. It’s Fedora which I already love, without any of the hassle. Everything just works. I never realized how much time I was wasting until I didn’t have to do it anymore. Every task I throw at it, it performs beautifully, even things I’m sure aren’t going to work out of the box do. Every time, so far.

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          I was surprised how well it handles printers. We have an old Brother wireless laser mfp. It was pretty cool when it just saw the printer automatically, but I was really impressed with how easy scanning was.

          I started going down the rabbit hole of manually installing and configuring it, but then tested some simple terminal command and it already saw the scanner. Ran skanpage and Bob’s your uncle.

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            I think you are the first person to ever have had issues with printers on Linux if you are surprised by them working on Bazzite. Printers are one of the things that almost always “just work” on Linux, and are only a driver headache on Windows

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              You must have uncanny luck with printers then. The printer I have I bought for it’s Linux support and I still have problems.

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                Across 3 offices and hundreds of PCs literally have never personally seen a issue with printers on Linux that wasnt like I forgot to hook it up to the network or something stupid.

                Printers tend to just work.

            • statler_waldorf@sopuli.xyz
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              To be fair, the he last time I was daily driving Linux was probably 20 years ago. I only came back in the last ~2 years.

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        Literally just the immutable thing. Otherwise it’s either worse or equal to every other flavor of the month option.

        So it just comes down to do you consider immutability a positive. If you do it’s the top of the stack since other options are not immutable.

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    Is this counting people who installed it and then left out of disappointment? I installed it once, and then I couldn’t navigate through the menu as mouse-less-ly as Linux Mint can, and Steam wouldn’t show any windows at all despite updating (only right-clicking the system tray icon would bring up that menu, but then clicking those entries or double-clicking the icon did nothing). It was just a really disappointing experience so I returned to Mint Cinnamon.

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    I’m one. I set up a Windows/bazzite dual boot situation and I’ve never booted windows since.

    • Camille_Jamal@lemmy.ml
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      what’s bazzite like? might experiment with it when I get my caseless frankenstein floor computer to work lol

      • HexaBack@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        think steamos with all of it’s goodies (and more bazzite-exclusive features), but on a more standardised linux base so you can run it on any pc and handheld, not just the steam deck. bazzite is also just as unbreakable as steamos, since it is an immutable (read-only system files) os, and updates the same way as a phone does (downloads an update in the background, and uses it on next boot with a rollback option in the super rare event that it breaks something).

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        Someone else could explain better than me I’m sure but, it’s a Linux distro that is gaming focused. It comes pre-loaded with steam and video card drivers so that someone has a decent chance that their games will just “work”.

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    Sample size of 1, here.

    Bazzite was my initial entry-point into Linux, but I bounced off it within 48 hours as its immutable nature made it impossible for me to install the native PIA VPN client and for the life of me I couldn’t get the OpenVPN to play nice.

    Currently on CachyOS, and seems to run just fine - giving an end user just enough rope 😅

    Plus it’s Arch underneath the hood too, so I can still cheekily say that I run Arch!

    ETA: I wonder if/how long I would count as part of this Bazzite cohort?

    • Elkenders@feddit.uk
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      Yeah I struggled with reading my rom library over SMB so also had to install something else.

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      Yeah, getting PIA running without the native client has been a bit rough. These days I’ve just gotten use to starting a terminal as soon as I log-in, but I probably need a more permanent solution. maybe it’ll be switching to cachy as well.

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          mullvad is a better choice anyways. you can also download a wireguard config and load it directly into the network manager

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            While I agree, it’s a pretty lame thing to say “This doesn’t work for your use case? That’s because your use case is wrong” If the distro doesn’t support PIA, then that is an issue with the distro, not the user.

            • Damage@feddit.it
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              Nah, it’s an issue, full stop. PIA isn’t responsible for making its shit work everywhere (tho it would be a more responsible approach to use an universal approach) and Bazzite isn’t responsible for making sure every program works on the distro.

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      PIA has OpenVPN or IPsec profiles (I forget which) that can be imported into NetworkManager. You just have to put in your account info.

      I don’t think every location has one…but a lot do.

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        There are apparently OpenVPN profile you can import, but as I said in my earlier comment - I just couldn’t get it to work (connection attempts would just time out).

        I still have like ~18 months of PIA left (joined under a 100% cashback offer), but will likely switch to Proton or Mullvad afterwards - as they both seem to work better under Linux from what I’ve read.

        I’m sure over time I’ll tinker more under the hood over time, but for now - I’m just trying to ease myself into Linux with pre-configured installers when particular apps aren’t available through the Cachy Package Manager.

        30-odd years of Windows usage has dulled my IT skills!

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          Proton has a client app as well, doesn’t it? If it doesn’t have OpenVPN/Wireshark config support I would avoid it

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        I barely know what I’m looking at! 😅

        Pretty sure I tried poking around that file on Bazzite also to see if I could locate the RPM to try and do a manual terminal install - but gave up after a few minutes.

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          sudo rpm-ostree install foo.rpm

          Should work. I’ve been doing this with the mullvad VPN client. Only annoyance is that I have to manually install when there’s an update (the app notifies me)

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    I’ve recently dove back into Linux and my last try was on Mint. After a few issues I went back to Windows. With the recent Microsoft news I wasn’t happy using a system that could start spying on me.

    It’s been close to a month and aside from some specific game issues likely due to running a nivida GPU I’ve been enjoying my time so far.

    Copy paste did take a while to get used to. Also the default screenshot tool doesn’t automatically put the snip on the clipboard.

    My main focus is gaming so this has been a solid operating system to use.

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      Always good to try out a few distros before settling in for the long run. As much as I love Mint, there are always cases where one distro has issues with your hardware where another doesn’t.

      Copy paste did take a while to get used to.

      Which part, the highlight-middle click part or something else?

      Also the default screenshot tool doesn’t automatically put the snip on the clipboard.

      In Mint? You’ve made me realize that would be convenient for me so I looked into it, I believe copying straight to clipboard is a default keyboard shortcut option I didn’t know about.

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        Sometimes ctrl c / v doesn’t work and it’s a combination of ctrl, super and C.
        Que confused “what’s the super key”

        Turns out that’s what the windows key on my keyboard is called. So far only when I was messing with the terminal.

        The screenshot tool in Brazzite. I think it’s called spectre.

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          Ctrl C doesn’t work in the terminal because that’s how you terminate programs. You need to use Ctrl shift c, control shift v etc.

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            Yep. Learning a lot of common inputs on Windows does and does not apply with Linux. Lots of muscle memory to retrain myself on.

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              That’s true.

              On one hand, there are often ways to change the settings to make things more like how they were on Windows,

              On the other hand, sometimes there’s a good reason for it to be different, so I always try to check why it’s different before changing it. An example is some window managers putting the taskbar panel at the top of the screen or on the side instead of the bottom (top panel is more convenient with a mouse, side panel takes up less space on a wide/landscape screen).

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    3 days ago

    As a normie, I love Bazzite because it’s as intuitive as Microsoft without the intrusive and monopolistic proprietary features, and Bazzite is also built for gaming.

  • Victor@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    I’m surprised people are so keen on these gaming-focused distros.

    I just want a great, general-purpose computing system that can do gaming as well. 😁

    • Ada@piefed.blahaj.zone
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      4 days ago

      It’s not so much that people are focused on gaming distros, it’s more that gaming distros historically haven’t been much of a thing, and gamers generally had to use windows for their gaming, because the linux experience was limited and sub-optimal. Even dedicated linux users would keep a windows partition/machine that they used for gaming.

      That’s not true anymore, as basically anything without kernel level anti cheat works on linux, which means that a huge amount of folk that would have moved to linux earlier, but couldn’t, are now coming over.

      Which is to say, it’s not so much that there is “so many of them”, it’s more that, they’re coming over in a big wave, because they’ve been there for years, but haven’t been able to move until recently, and now, they know that there are distros out there that look and feel like something they’re familiar with.

      • Victor@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        I guess we have different use cases is all. People who primarily use their computers for gaming.

        My PC is:

        1. My media server
        2. My workstation when WFH
        3. My entertainment center if the TV is busy
        4. My gaming PC
        5. My hobby development PC

        (In no particular order.)

        • EldritchFemininity@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          2 days ago

          I think a lot of people are basically looking for “Windows but not Microsoft/Windows”. So it’s their gaming PC where they also browse the internet/social media and watch YouTube or Twitch (sometimes at the same time that they’re gaming), and maybe do some other ancillary stuff like art (digital art, 3d rendering, music, video or photo editing, etc.) or some other hobby related stuff.

          So Bazzite is kinda at the center of this perfect storm where plenty of PC gamers have seen the SteamOS/Big Picture mode and gone, “If I could use SteamOS as a traditional desktop, I would in a heartbeat” while Microsoft is also fumbling harder than they ever have - which is saying a lot - and Linux is the easiest to get up and running that it’s ever been - to the point where immutable distros are as plug and play as Windows. Then Bazzite comes along and says, “Hey, SteamOS isn’t desktop comparable yet, so we went and made it ourselves (with blackjack, and hookers).”

            • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              1 day ago

              You install the package and it adds it to your OS image (that re-initializes every time you boot).

              They say you should try to avoid it if you can, so if there’s a flatpak use that, if not, then a distrobox with Fedora toolbox for .RPMs or Arch (for AUR and yay) or whatever other distro you choose, then shortcutting it right to your host OS. By this point, you’ve probably already found a way (or three) to get it to work.

              If all that doesn’t work, then you can layer packages onto your image by installing the local .RPM using rpm-ostree then rebooting. I’ve only had to do this with my VPN client so far. Only annoyance is that you have to update it manually.

    • sam@piefed.ca
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      4 days ago

      Most people I know primarily use their desktop computers for games. Bazzite also works great for general purpose computing, although it isn’t advertised as such.

      • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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        3 days ago

        It’s like gaming laptops. The concept of something being “gaming” focused is nonsense bullshit pr spin.

        If it’s good at gaming it’s basically just good at everything. But people gobble up gaming like leds on a serect lab chair.

      • dajoho@sh.itjust.works
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        3 days ago

        Agreed. Bloody fantastic for general purpose. Seems like a well kept secret. A lot of people assume Bazzite is just Steam in Big-Screen mode.

      • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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        3 days ago

        For some things.

        For many things it isn’t. It is usable (I use it) but with a bunch of workarounds for anything embedded development-related since it needs specific vendor software with device access. I have had to use a variety of distrobox + app image solutions that are often a bit worse than a system that installs them as native apps.

        • sam@piefed.ca
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          3 days ago

          I don’t personally count “embedded development-related” as “general computing” so I think there’s a disconnect there. 😅

    • DillingerEscape@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Universal Blue is the project which maintains Bazzite and other brilliant immutable images based on Fedora Silverblue (Gnome) and Fedora Kinoite (KDE)

      Bazzite has Steam bundled in the image which is a bit better for performance, Bazzite-dx is Bazzite with devtools.

      Aurora is another image made for general computing, Steam is installed as a Flatpak with a little worse performance but not much

      Bluefin is your typical dev-workstation

      If you’re serious about gaming I recommend KDE as your desktop environment, plays nicer with HDR, VRR and fractional scaling than Gnome.

      • Victor@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        Why is Flatpak Steam worse for performance? I’ve been using it for years, seemingly better performance than Windows on the same system. Something inherent about Flatpak?

        If you’re serious about gaming I recommend KDE as your desktop environment, plays nicer with HDR, VRR and fractional scaling than Gnome.

        Mm, I don’t think I’d be willing to sacrifice my Niri workflow. Niri also supports fractional scaling and VRR, but not yet HDR, which I can live without until it’s implemented. 😁

        • BaroqueInMind@piefed.social
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          3 days ago

          Flatpak is simply a sandboxed application, similar to a Docker container. Its better to have natively installed applications over sandboxed if you are seeking the highest level of performance.

          You have essentially made all your games run within a sandboxed instance which has a limited set of binaries that emulate another mini OS within your primary OS.

          If you haven’t seen any performance issues, then keep on doing what you’re doing, the software is very well made compared to Ubuntu Snap and likely has similar driver performance as close as possible to bare-metal

          • Victor@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            essentially made all your games run within a sandboxed instance which has a limited set of binaries that emulate another mini OS within your primary OS.

            Isn’t it just library bundling? It’s not like it’s running inside a virtual machine or anything.

            I can see the Rocket League process right there when listing my user processes, e.g.

            There are so many conflicting reports regarding the performance on Flatpak, for Steam but also in general, so I don’t know what to believe.

            At least one source said the performance overhead is negligible on modern hardware, so I think I’m gucci.

          • atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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            3 days ago

            Flatpak is simply a sandboxed application, similar to a Docker container. Its better to have natively installed applications over sandboxed if you are seeking the highest level of performance.

            This is bullshit. Containers run natively on your system just like “native” [sic] applications.

              • Victor@lemmy.world
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                3 days ago

                That’s not what they were refuting. They were just saying that containers run on the metal just like any other software.

                🙂

              • markstos@lemmy.world
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                3 days ago

                That’s not what the FAQ says, rather it says Flatpaks are often sandboxed but not fully containerized. Containers don’t need to have a performance penalty because they run on the same kernel as the host. Container tech applies a chroot, disables some capabilities within the container and that’s about it. They are in contrast to virtual machines that need to boot an entire additional OS before doing anything.

      • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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        3 days ago

        Generally your life is improved any time you choose to not engage with gnome or it’s nonsense. It’s a good rule of thumb for everything Linux related.

        Gnome is just bad apple.

    • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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      4 days ago

      Yeah, I’m the same, but if it’s an easy way to get people into the warm embrace of Linux, then hopefully they’ll look around and see other (Gen Purpose) distros exist.

      • XiELEd@piefed.social
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        4 days ago

        To be fair some of these distros centered on gaming may really have some priorities that are more useful for gamers. Like better driver and system support. And I think they’re still capable of doing well outside of gaming.

    • chaosCruiser@futurology.today
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      4 days ago

      In my experience, Debian has been very low maintenance. Occasionally, you may run into an issue that would be solved by having newer packages. If that happens, consider switching to Fedora.

      My Fedora installations have been pretty smooth. The only thing that always breaks randomly is the software update GUI. I just got fed up with that and ended up using the terminal for installing all updates. Apparently this distro requires a bit more maintenance.

      • Victor@lemmy.world
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        Fedora installations have been pretty smooth.

        ended up using the terminal for installing all updates.

        My experience as well with my Arch installations after a decade with that distro. I run a system upgrade because I want to, not because I need to. Never does it break unless I’m careless when upgrading and not checking the news page beforehand, which you are supposed to do. As long as I play by the rules, it’s super stable. (Never did it break for me anyway though. Never happened apart from hardware failure.)

        Although admittedly I almost never do check the news page before upgrading, but/because there’s rarely anything there. And after a while you learn to recognize the volatile packages which can break your system, so e.g. if systemd has an update I’ll check the page before hitting enter, and so on.

          • Victor@lemmy.world
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            Yeah, vaguely 😅 I use syslinux for booting, habit from when I used to dual boot, so I was luckily not affected. But yes, it is definitely wise to check the news before upgrading system-critical packages!

            • chaosCruiser@futurology.today
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              I can’t be bothered to update every day, or even every week. LOL. More like once a month or so, which means that it’s usually 100 MB or more and there’s at least one package that is more or less critical. When I start updating, and before hitting Y, I pause for a second and realise I should totally check the news first. Usually, it’s fine, but over the years, there have been a few times when intervention was necessary.

              • Victor@lemmy.world
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                3 days ago

                If you only update once a month (which should be fine as well, definitely), then you only need to check the news page once a month too, less often than I do probably. 😄 Seems like a win-win. 👌

                You can also selectively update packages of course, but this is strongly ill-advised unless you know what you’re doing.

                But like, doas pacman -Sy firefox should be fine…

                You didn’t hear it from me. 🤐🥸

                • chaosCruiser@futurology.today
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                  3 days ago

                  The “unless you know what you’re doing” part tells me it’s totally worth it in some highly exceptional situations. You just need to be able to justify spending a few hours to figure out exactly how to do it safely.

                  Best thing about Linux is that you can do literally anything you want. If it works, it’s awesome. If you break your system, you get to keep the pieces and learn something new along the way.

                  I’m utilizing this liberty by being a lazy admin who updates things like eventually™ or soon™. Haven’t learned any hard lessons yet, so I guess it’s ok. Or maybe I just know what I’m doing…

    • Kronusdark@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Yea I bounced off Bazzite because I needed to run plex. And I couldn’t get a container to run reliably on it. It’s still a cool distro though.

      Edit: typo

        • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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          4 days ago

          This. If you must have rooted containers docker-compose is only a

          rpm-ostree install docker-compose

          away, but that’s a big ass layer, you’ll feel it every update, and insecure to boot (yes I know docker finally got userspace, but how many times have you seen it used? Everywhere it’s root.). Run your docker-compose file through podlet, and there you go, userspace quadlets (95+% of the time, every time…). They’re easy to love once you get your head around them.

          • atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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            3 days ago

            Yeah, this is the “fun” of bazite. If you want to do the things it does well (desktopy things) it works well. But then things that are trivial in other distros are a pain. And the “solution” is to actually run one of those other distros in a container. It’s ridiculous.

            Bazite is for people who want a computer to be like an iPhone near as I can tell.

              • atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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                2 days ago

                It’s not a pain, it’s just a different process than what you’re used to

                That’s exactly how people defend something that is a pain.

            • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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              3 days ago

              I think you as yet don’t quite understand the full beauty of immutable distros. Running things in distroboxes, yeah even other distros, is not a bug, it’s a feature (really) because you cannot break your main OS with a distrobox. As a developer it’s a godsend, finnicky AI project that needs a specific version of python and CUDA drivers and only has instructions for Arch ? That’s a distrobox, spin it up, play with it, archive it for later, put it away.

              There’s tiers in Bazzite, for GUI apps, flatpak, if what you want isn’t there, it’s in a distrobox Arch in AUR and you can integrate it as an application into the main OS. Stuff that truly needs system level access, like zsh and intel-undervolt gets layered into the main OS with rpm-ostree. There’s security benefits as well like SELinux, but this post has gone on long enough.

              It is so not an iPhone.

    • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 days ago

      I have two computers at my main desk at home. One is exclusively used for gaming, the other is used for everything else. In theory Bazzite is perfect for me.

      • Victor@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        Why don’t you do the “everything else” part on your gaming PC as well so you don’t have to have two?

        • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 days ago

          Performance. I’m a heavy multi tasker and I want nothing to get in the way of my frame rate.

          For context my old second machine was a 2018 Mac mini with an 8th Gen. i5 and 32 gigs of ram. It wasn’t enough.

          • Victor@lemmy.world
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            4 days ago

            Huh.

            I guess with my 16 cores and 64 GB DDR5 I don’t really notice anything hampering my frame rate. 😅

            But on my old PC with just 12 cores and 32 GB DDR4, I would sometimes close Firefox and all those YouTube tabs to get some memory back and make some CPU cycles available. Gosh darn Linux just handing out memory on loan rather than what’s available. I don’t use a swap file either. 😅

            But I guess just closing stuff down isn’t an option? Is it like services running?

            • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              4 days ago

              AMDs dual CCD CPUs tend to perform worse than their single ccd models in games. You can “fix” that by running the game only on one, and push everything else to the second. But I’d much rather not deal with that. A second computer is much easier.

              Plus I can fuck with computer A when computer B is still doing other things without interrupting. That alone is worth it.

              Also if you’re in a game and you have a video running that taking GPU horsepower. I’m not going to have a second GPU just to avoid that.

              • Victor@lemmy.world
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                4 days ago

                Hey, if you have the space and don’t mind the extra heat and electricity consumption 😎👌 all good by me.

                • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  4 days ago

                  That’s the other thing. My new computer is a Mac Studio which takes up almost no space, and uses like 10-15 watts. Because I can just turn off my gaming computer when I’m not using it I’m saving significantly more power. Like just your CPU at idle uses more than the entire Mac actually doing things.

                • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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                  4 days ago

                  My second screen is a laptop (T580), also bazzite, often running moonlight to the big monitor so the main box goes to low power mode when not in use (it’s also the NAS, so no sleep, but mostly lives @ ~50W, got the GPU down to 4W idle :)

  • inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Very cool. I am still running Bazzite as my reintroduction into Linux as a daily and it’s been great for gaming but I will say that as more and more familiarity rolls in, I do get frustrated with it being an immutable distro and having to jump through hoops to get it do what I want.

    Still I think it’s a great distro for those who don’t want to deal with MS bullshit anymore and a great friendly, works right out of the box while you learn or relearn Linux, and gets you gaming without a lot of hassle and having to deal with less than friendly Linux users.

    • Damage@feddit.it
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      3 days ago

      I found, as an experienced Linux user, that with Bazzite you’ve got to forget the complicated approaches you’re used to, and go for the easy one, it usually works. Lots can be done from KDE’s system settings, or from the bundled utilities. Also I disagree with the order they chose for the application installation methods on their wiki, I think distrobox should be right after Flatpak.