Has anyone else had this problem? I updated my openSuse Tumbleweed today (restart required), and now none of my games work. Most are through Steam, so at first I thought it was that. But I have Cyberpunk through GOG launched with Heroic. And even more, Alien Arena has the same problem, so it’s not even a proton issue (I did try changing proton versions before the other games too).

What happens is that either they freeze entirely, crash to desktop (after a short time), or freeze then crash. It seems like the bigger the game, the more quickly it crashes, which makes me think memory issue. This seemed moreso since ARK didn’t even get to the launch menu screen, just played some music while my desktop froze, and I could see my memory widget maxed out. Then the music fizzled and then CTD.

I’ve never run into a problem like this and have no idea where even to look.

Edit: Another update today and now half of my games work. Even weirder.

Edit: Solved: Was a bug in kernel 6.8.9. Rebooted into 6.8.8 and all is well. Guess We’ll see how the next one goes.

  • kbal
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    201 month ago

    There was a bug in a few recent linux kernel versions which might account for it if the one you’ve got is 6.8.9 for example. It was only recently patched and Suse might have had the bad luck to just miss the fix for it before sending you the update. If so I imagine they’ll apply that patch soon.

  • @toothbrush
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    101 month ago

    Do you have btrfs? It might be time to rollback until an update fixes the issue.

    • @kurcatovium@lemm.ee
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      71 month ago

      Snapper for the rescue! Again. I still don’t get how everyone else ignores this awesome piece of software?!

    • @Murdoc@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      21 month ago

      I do, although I’ve never had to deal with that before (just started a month or two ago) so I’ll have to look it up. Does it work on the whole drive, or can I do it by partition/logical volume?

        • Turun
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          41 month ago

          It works by subvolume, which are not equivalent to partitions.

        • @Murdoc@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          21 month ago

          Thankfully I didn’t have to use it, but in looking it up at least I know how to now. Opensuse makes it pretty easy!

  • Had issues like that from time to time, when graphics drivers got borked during the update/did not exist for the new kernel.

    solution was allways to either remove the drivers and reinstall them or rollback to an earlier snapshot and wait a week.

  • @boatswain@infosec.pub
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    81 month ago

    I had a similar issue recently on Garuda, and what fixed it for me was going into the BIOS and enabling Resizable BAR.

  • poVoqM
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    31 month ago

    If you are on Nvidia, try reinstalling the binary drivers. On kernel updates the akmod stuff sometimes needs to be recompiled.

  • Count Regal Inkwell
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    1 month ago

    Oh! I am not the only one!

    Good. I thought I had fucked something up. Now I guess it’s something that is out of my hands.

    Guess I’ll just keep playing the ones that do work (it’s not a lot of them).

    Edit: Well, this dumbass here doesn’t have btrfs and can’t use snapper. BUT. I downloaded an older version of the kernel (from the 30th of last month) from the SUSE repo and installed that. I’ll try rebooting later and see if it makes a difference.

    Edit 2: WELL it didn’t work. Trying to boot into the older kernel caused other things to break. System seemed to load with a generic graphics driver instead of the proper driver for my AMDGPU… ? I imagine I’d have to downgrade more packages than just the kernel itself for things to actually function, but that is beyond by knowledge. Back to plan A of hoping it gets fixed. :P