this post was submitted on 29 Aug 2025
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I can only second that, I made the switch early this year and it's made me love my PC again.
I don't think I could've done it "years ago" though, Proton in its current form with a user friendly distro like bazzite haven't been around for too long.
I know, right?! That was the best part. It felt so liberating, as if I was transported back to the early 2000s when the OS was a tool, not an ad-infused spyware machine. The best thing is that I have control and - surprisingly - confidence. I was worried I'd only have control and over time I'd get confidence. But essentially, I had confidence day one.
I'm still a nascent Linux user, but using this OS is so refreshing. I love my PC so much.
This is exactly how I felt when I made the switch a couple of years back. Like this is what using a personal computer was always meant to feel like, and this is what Microsoft has taken from us.
I started using Linux most of the time in 1998 because my parents had installed RedHat 5.2 to dual boot with Windows and I didn't like what Microsoft was doing back then, so I decided to use Linux whenever I'm not playing games. (And then moved on to SuSe 7 in 2001, then to Debian, and later, when Ubuntu was invented, moved to Ubuntu, and when Linux Mint came around, started using that one. (wait, no, actually I moved only when I got pissed off by Unity, which was horrible in its first forms!) Starting from Debian, things were already quite easy, although configuring the graphical environment, X, was super tedious...)
It's a bit weird feeling reading about how people write about how bad Windows has gone, and not really having experience of it since Windows 7, that I did have for a while in between. That was probably in 2011 or so. Then I soon got a new computer and kind of forgot to install Windows on it, because things worked well enough anyway.
In any case, already when Ubuntu came out, I already felt that every time I had to resolve my friends' issues on their Windows computers that it was a very good thing that I was running Linux at home, because it meant there was so much less hassle! It felt like "damn, if people only knew how well this works these days, they'd never want to use Windows. And then there would be more software as well!"
I've used "Linux for work" and "Windows for gaming" for a long time, about twenty years now. Got fed up with Windows shitting itself on a regular basis, and made myself a new year's resolution to try Linux-only gaming for a bit, see if it would work for me, and I never went back. That was in 2021, and it's just been getting better and better.
Linux Mint has always been an easy install, and putting Steam on top to get Proton is pretty trivial. A few things have made an amazing difference:
installing the official NVidia drivers used to be a pain in the arse. Download them, stop your display manager, blacklist Nouveau, install them from the command line, restart and hope for the best. Awful. I've gone fully AMD, but I understand they're pretty much a non-issue now.
Proton keeps getting better and better. Seriously, they fix compatibility with about 99% of the games that were broken every year, basically everything runs now. Maybe leave off buying anything with a tech-demo engine for a week, and accept that you won't be playing stuff with certain anti-cheat, and it's all good.
DXVK gets overlooked, but it's amazing. Basically frame-for-frame with Windows on every game, and on some it's better as it fixes intrusive stutter by precompiling. Can't argue with that.