speaking of Valve, I still am kinda kicking myself for not getting a Steam Deck a couple years ago when I was looking to get a small Linux computer. I remember at the time being like "Ok, sure, you can do desktop stuff on it too, but I'm not interested in PC games, I'm a console gamer".linuxavali wrote: Sun Jul 13, 2025 2:54 pm Honestly, Valve has been a great upstream contributor to the Linux kernel and the open source community. They have been throwing a unprecedented number of hours at open source projects they don't own to make gaming on Linux work and they deserve every bit of praise that get for it. We might be seeing more anti-cheat compatability with linux going forward though since Microsoft is now working with anti-cheat and AV providers to move their code out of the windows kernel and into user land, making it a lot easier to emulate under wine/proton. I don't want to say "X year will be the year of the linux desktop" but damn does it ever feel close. The Linux usage numbers are constantly creeping up on the Steam hardware servery which is a good sign.
And sure enough, that changed last year, so I'm like "well crap xP"
especially since the mini computer I ultimately went with cost like €1000, and the Steam Deck is available for far less. with both devices being about equal in terms of processing power.
*sigh* hindsight is 20/20, I guess
Oooo, neat! :OPandro wrote: Sun Jul 13, 2025 2:59 pm I got StarCraft 2 and FFXIV to run with it. Although for StarCraft 2 (and other Blizzard games) I had to fiddle with the wine prefix every now and then to keep it working when they changed something in the launcher. Has been a while though since I played either of them![]()
I think if I'm ever gonna give FF14 a try, it's gonna be through the Steam version. That just seems far simpler to set up, especially since I don't even know if I'm gonna stick with the game or not.