this post was submitted on 05 Jul 2026
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Linux Gaming
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"Windows doesn't require any tinkering, just run this to make a local account, decline 100 requests to use OneDrive and Office 365, get these debloaters, uninstall all these things, and make sure you always tell Windows to not restart your computer while you're using it every time it updates. And when it does update, you'll need to run the debloaters again."
I've been using Linux for 3 years, Mint then LMDE and the not tinkering is bullshit
On my laptop the boot drive is forever filling up with Linux Kernel updates and i need to delete them. i have a 1GB partition, there's no simple way to. do that, there's a bunch of commands i need to use in Terminal, it's bullshit that I even need to do it
On my desktop just installing Signal was a drama (no official flatpak) the command line given on the Signal site is not just copy paste and it's Debian.
then lets not even talk of Davinci Resolve.
i have zero intention of going back to Windows and my needs are quite simple but there is a fair bit of tinkering even then.
Out of three issues, two are just "app isn't made to be easily installed on Linux", which isn't on Linux itself, but the ones making the app. still, valid issues.
The boot drive filling up is REALLY annoying because on modern systems there's no need for it to even BE a dedicated partition.
Even with encryption and BTRFS, boot can live in your root partiotion just fine. Only EFI needs a partition and that never fills up.
Distros need to change this default!
I mean, you don't really have to do these stuff. I doubt the comment's author's friend cares about debloating and privacy.
Yes, in the same way that you don't typically need to tinker with Linux
In the end they're not so different, except Windows intentionally does anti-consumer things that make people want to tinker.
No joke my linux laptop hardest part was the initial install. Steam made gaming seemless. No ms account login, no asking for ai, no drivers. Just install and boom im playing my games. Its so nice.
Literally, my Linux Mint came with the drivers for the wifi, meanwhile Windows always needed me to put them there...
I put Windows on my laptop last year-ish, same exact one with Linux on it now. Took around 2.5x slower to start it up. Win 11 at the time. Fresh off a new image.
Linux takes less than 10 sec. And thats without any optimization and a "heavy" distro like PopOS.
Mint is a good option too :)
I prefer Mint Cinnamon because it's the closest I have to my long time experience with Windows. It feels closer to it, more intuitive even if vastly different.
Its good to have choice. Ive seen experienced users use Mint to the reasons you stated. I know a lot of people recommend it as a "beginner" linux, but if you can install stuff without issues, then its just as advanced as the other stuff.
I like Pop because it feels as stable as Debian while keeping up with the packages like other distros.
Ive tried Gentoo and Arch for a bit there and got the custom OS itch out. But I still respect people that do that kind of work for the rest of us. Stability for all.
True, having different choices with different people to cater to is very good
There's what Die4Ever said, but there's also Windows 11 incompatibility with games that otherwise just work with Proton. Around when I got my Steam Deck, I also had a Windows PC that was, to my initial surprise, more of a hassle for games, so I pretty quickly switched to Linux Mint, and later Fedora.
I used Ubuntu way back when on secondary PCs mostly for fun, but Linux has only outpaced Windows imo in the past five years.
And if some obscure error code shows up, the first five points in the knowledge base are powershell commands.