Valve released another smaller update for Proton Experimental, the constantly changing compatibility layer to run Windows games on Linux platforms like the Steam Deck with SteamOS.
In the use case of the person who originally commented I would rather use Fedora and then eventually tweak it using some of Nobara’s stuff to my liking.
And thats fine for you if thats what you want to do.
Not everyone wants to spend endless hours tweaking.
I’m stuck. I want a distro that makes gaming easy-ish
And judging by this, he doesnt either. He just wants games to work easily. and Nobara does that. since it has everything ready to go. Especially since it has a version that also has the nvdia drivers baked in.
In the use case of the person who originally commented I would rather use Fedora and then eventually tweak it using some of Nobara’s stuff to my liking.
And thats fine for you if thats what you want to do.
Not everyone wants to spend endless hours tweaking.
And judging by this, he doesnt either. He just wants games to work easily. and Nobara does that. since it has everything ready to go. Especially since it has a version that also has the nvdia drivers baked in.
Nobara is like 3 or 4 tweaks, not endless hours and is already gaming ready by default…
@seliaste @A_Random_Idiot I use Nobara all the time. Have it installed on a desktop, laptop and my ASUS ROG ALLY