It works nicely, and I use it for VR games, but it doesn’t really solve the anti-cheat problem, because these anti-cheats tends to not allow VMs anyway.
How is the company fucking me, if I enjoy playing the game and get my money’s worth?
Perhaps Linux isn’t the right operating system, but it’s competing with Windows, which is more or less a jack of all trades. Linux today isn’t a jack of all trades, mostly a niche solution. That is fine, but we can then not pretend it’s for everyone.
Meanwhile, I’ll keep trying with Linux, hoping one day it will be the jack of all trades and I can seamlessly use it.
A jack of all trades is something that does a lot of things reasonably well. I’d argue that Linux is exactly that.
Your only issue seems to be with certain types of games not working. That’s not the fault of Linux (as others have explained), but it seems like a fairly niche situation, so I don’t think it applies to your “jack off all trades” argument.
Would you say that MacOS is not a “jack off all trades”? It does a much poorer job with games than Linux…
How is the company fucking me, if I enjoy playing the game and get my money’s worth?
If it doesn’t bother you, you do you.
To me, it’s fucking with me when they add software layers that adds no value and just makes my game harder to play, long term.
Note that I’m not as mad at anti-cheat stuff, since it does add value. It’s usually a shitty half-assed solution, but it has a reason to be there. And most of it works better on Linux anyway.
It’s the weird other extra stuff that makes feel like they’re just fucking with me. There’s no remaining technical reasons a new game can’t run on my SteamDeck better than on my Windows laptop. And most games do.
It could be a form of bundling, tacit veritcal integratation, magin squeeze , price discrimination, tie-ins etc.
Various tricks oligopolistic companies use to prevent competition from bidding prices down - trying to extract a bit of extra profit.
The harm is that people are paying more than they might - or for extra features they cant opt out of than they would in a free or open market. Likely the harm is very diffuse and no one person is all that bothered to be paying 10% more or whatever, but it all adds up.
Anti-trust regulators are so weak they don’t really have to try though. TBF it’s very hard to prove this stuff in court even if there was a political will to improve competition to benefit consumers.
That’s not “Linux isn’t ready”, it’s “I still play games from companies that like to fuck with me.”
It’s fine, and we get it. But Linux isn’t ever going to fix that.
Edit: We are seeing a lot more care from companies now that the SteamDeck is popular, so I hope your favorites get some relief.
I’ve accepted that I’ll need a weird rig to play my favorite games that come from developers with shitty practices.
Ironically, mine tend to be Linux rigs emulating Windows to get things just right. But we do what we have to do play our favorite games.
Anyway, I’m not judging you, or your gaming choice.
I’m judging the game developers for choosing shitty tools that make our lives harder.
Luckily PCI pass-through using IOMMU works nicely these days, but I honestly still keep a Windows 10 partition for this…
It works nicely, and I use it for VR games, but it doesn’t really solve the anti-cheat problem, because these anti-cheats tends to not allow VMs anyway.
How is the company fucking me, if I enjoy playing the game and get my money’s worth?
Perhaps Linux isn’t the right operating system, but it’s competing with Windows, which is more or less a jack of all trades. Linux today isn’t a jack of all trades, mostly a niche solution. That is fine, but we can then not pretend it’s for everyone.
Meanwhile, I’ll keep trying with Linux, hoping one day it will be the jack of all trades and I can seamlessly use it.
A jack of all trades is something that does a lot of things reasonably well. I’d argue that Linux is exactly that.
Your only issue seems to be with certain types of games not working. That’s not the fault of Linux (as others have explained), but it seems like a fairly niche situation, so I don’t think it applies to your “jack off all trades” argument.
Would you say that MacOS is not a “jack off all trades”? It does a much poorer job with games than Linux…
If it doesn’t bother you, you do you.
To me, it’s fucking with me when they add software layers that adds no value and just makes my game harder to play, long term.
Note that I’m not as mad at anti-cheat stuff, since it does add value. It’s usually a shitty half-assed solution, but it has a reason to be there. And most of it works better on Linux anyway.
It’s the weird other extra stuff that makes feel like they’re just fucking with me. There’s no remaining technical reasons a new game can’t run on my SteamDeck better than on my Windows laptop. And most games do.
It could be a form of bundling, tacit veritcal integratation, magin squeeze , price discrimination, tie-ins etc.
Various tricks oligopolistic companies use to prevent competition from bidding prices down - trying to extract a bit of extra profit. The harm is that people are paying more than they might - or for extra features they cant opt out of than they would in a free or open market. Likely the harm is very diffuse and no one person is all that bothered to be paying 10% more or whatever, but it all adds up.
Anti-trust regulators are so weak they don’t really have to try though. TBF it’s very hard to prove this stuff in court even if there was a political will to improve competition to benefit consumers.