Parptarf
- 7 Posts
- 43 Comments
Parptarf@lemm.eeto Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion Remastered revealed, it's out now and Steam Deck VerifiedEnglish4·6 days agoPlaying this as we speak. Runs great on Fedora 42. (R7 7700, 9070XT and 32GB ram)
Also feels just like the original with better graphics and a few QOL changes that I’ve noticed.
This community has been mind-blowingly helpful every single step of the way so far. At this point I cannot see myself going back to windows. Other than the few things I use that won’t work obviously.
Does this work for games that I have in the EA App and Ubisoft-thingy too?
Oh, I misunderstood completely what Wine Manager actually is it seems like. Though that was just a configure tool for Wine.
I’ll have a look. I like Heroic’s interface WAY more than Lutris
Edit: Would you look at that, if I only actually looked in that menu I would have tried it already. Giving it a go now
Played a few missions after installing Linux. Works fine with Proton Hotfix enabled in Steam. Honestly feels like it has less stutters too.
Parptarf@lemm.eeOPto Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Old games that needed patches on WindowsEnglish1·15 days agoI’ll look into this too. I’ve had this issue with TibSun for years but the unofficial patch from cncnet usually fixed it.
A lot of the stuff I come across in Linux makes more sense than in Windows honestly. It’s just completely different and that makes it hard when you’re used to messing with .exe files, .dll files and regedits.
Parptarf@lemm.eeOPto Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Old games that needed patches on WindowsEnglish1·15 days agoThis worked for TibSun. Thanks!
Got the cncnet patch installed. Now to check if the patch actually fix the black menu issue.
Edit: Didn’t fix the issue for that game. But I now know how to uninstall patches using .exe files!
Parptarf@lemm.eeOPto Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Old games that needed patches on WindowsEnglish1·15 days agoI used to prefer cncnet back in the day. I noticed they have Linux builds for a lot of Westwood games so if I fail to make the EA App version work I’ll just get that or openRA.
Parptarf@lemm.eeOPto Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Old games that needed patches on WindowsEnglish1·15 days agoAbsolutely incredible info. Saving this for later!
I’m not changing anytime soon. I ended up choosing Nobara after this thread ☺️
Ended up going with Nobara KDE. So far just about everything I’ve tried to do just worked flawlessly.
That’s the reason I was considering Fedora instead. But I just installed Nobara, so I’ll see how it goes.
I’m VERY curious about Arch, but I’ll stay on this distro for a little bit(I think)
I absolutely despise installing Windows. Takes forever.
Linux distros take like 10 minutes. I love it!
You guys might have talked me into Nobora actually.
I’ve not been someone who’s favored stability over new tech and performance on Windows, so why should I on Linux?
Also, like others have said, changing the Distro if I hate it isn’t exactly the end of the world anyways.
That’s an excellent point.
I run a brand new GPU, I like to play both very old and brand new games. I sometimes overclock my hardware, I’ve been really into modding games in the past.
Stable isn’t really how my gaming ecosystem is on Windows either. Not to mention Windows, Nvidia, AMD etc have always had a element of instability to it. I’ve ran beta updates on my PC for years and also do that on my phone. The amount of times I’v messed around in regedit, cmd, bios, eventviewer etc. is beyond what I can remember. I’ve been adopting windows versions early since Vista came out too.
I’ve never really been happy with stable. Maybe I this question should be «Arch vs Fedora» instead, but I’m not cocky enough(yet) I guess 😂
The kernel doesn’t support Mesa 25 drivers out of the box, so Radeon 9000 cards wouldn’t work properly. No games would run. Also the version of Steam downloaded directly from their website didn’t want to start, no window shows up and it just runs in the background.
Easy fix after a quick
GoogleQwant search. But someone who doesn’t have at least some deeper experience with either MacOS or Windows wouldn’t know where to start to fix such an issue either.Other than this it’s been fine.
It did definitely do that for me. Tried that and Pop.
Luckily this community helped me figure it out together with information found searching the web. If I wasn’t persistent and somewhat tech savvy I’d be stuck for sure.
I like this answer!
Nobara is actually one I highly considered. But I keep reading that base Fedora is more stable.
Of that’s not true I love the features Nobara comes with.
Sometimes, but it’s Oblivion running in UE5 so I didn’t exactly expect perfect performance at launch.
Doesn’t bother me much. Lack of FSR4 bothers me more, but that’s a «linux issue» and not the game’s fault.