this post was submitted on 25 Oct 2025
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My distro of choice is Debian (I like their philosophy and it works great on my laptop) but I have an nVidia card in my desktop PC, and driver management was kind of annoying. Decided to try Kubuntu, which worked ok, but I didn't really love, and then I didn't update for a bit too long and had some repo issues trying to install updates. I didn't bother digging into what the fix would be, since I had been considering Bazzite for a while, as it has been talked about a lot for gaming.

Knowing literally nothing other than "Bazzite works out of the box with nVidia" I figured I'd give it a go. First off, I was surprised at the size of the image, and how long the install took. I did some reading about atomic distros and began to understand why things were set up that way. Seems pretty cool! I still don't love that as soon as I logged in on my fresh install, Steam opened up and asked for a log in, but that is what I signed up for with Bazzite, I guess. The nVidia drivers out of the box worked fantastic, as advertised, and I love a good KDE desktop, so it's not all bad.

Initially I was frustrated that some things weren't working in the flatpak versions of the app (couldn't get to my 3d printer using the .local address from the browser because flatpak has a bug with mDNS) and layering a package with rpm-ostree seems like overkill and not a good experience. Then I watched some videos on distrobox.

I can just distrobox create --image debian:latest debian-box and then use apt install for whatever packages I want, export them and use them as if they were natively installed on Bazzite??? And this works on any distro??? I have been using Linux exclusively for a few years (and on and off for more years), but I have been totally out of the loop with distrobox and atomic distros. This feels like the same level of magic I felt when I first dual booted Ubuntu back in the Windows Vista days. This seems like it will fix 99% of the issues I run into on Linux.

I know distrobox isn't exclusive to atomic distros, but I wouldn't have discovered it if not for Bazzite.

Anyway, none of this is really new info, but I just wanted to nerd out about it for a bit with people who will know what I'm talking about.

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[–] YesIAmHoomanNoCat@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

I just installed bazzite a couple of weeks ago and have multiple issues. Gonna have to migrate away from it again.. Unstable WLAN, Sound Bugs and lag spikes in games

[–] bargo@mastodon.tn 0 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

@YesIAmHoomanNoCat @AldinTheMage they can exist for you only, it depends, is your device an unsupported or Linux-aggressive one? I have a Gigabyte laptop that is very aggressive towards Linux but is pretty much supported, and I don't have any shame to say that I use Cachy, Generally Linux since I bought it (the Laptop), I know this because I bought to my brother a sibling Laptop, same brand, and last year it did a very stupid thing, it activated secure boot with no way to disable it

[–] bargo@mastodon.tn 0 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago) (1 children)

@YesIAmHoomanNoCat @AldinTheMage a quick google search revealed that this was common & someone posted about it on Gigabyte Support forum & the reply was that "your laptop doesn't support Linux", also another result gave a relatively simple solution, but the damage was done, I lost my brother to the dark side, & I don't think there sells in tunisia a Linux-friendly device (yes not even a SteamDeck)

[–] YesIAmHoomanNoCat@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago)

I mean thanks for your research but it's not applicable.

I have a custom desktop with a MSi board and the proclaimed 'just works' distro is lacking.

I'm just grumpy and tired if having to troubleshoot everyone of my linux installs :(

[–] TheMadCodger@piefed.social 21 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (6 children)

If you're not primarily a gamer, Bazzite has a sister ~~Kinoite~~ Aurora (or Bluefin if you want Gnome, but you said you like KDE), which is the same underlying OS, but not preconfigured for gaming. I use Bluefin on my laptop and Bazzite on my steam deck, and yeah I love not having to think about it.

Also, have you read about rebasing?

edit: Kinoite and Silverblue are Fedora's default atomic distros. Aurora and Bluefin are the equivalents that are preconfigured out of the box for ease of use and related to Bazzite.

[–] AldinTheMage@ttrpg.network 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I have heard of rebasing but I haven't dug into it. Sounds really cool!

I do use my PC for gaming, but Bazzite did come with a lot of other "gaming" software that I don't use, so it's good to know there is a lighter weight alternative that otherwise has the same benefits.

[–] TheMadCodger@piefed.social 3 points 2 days ago

I'm no expert, but I think of it as two layers: your layer on top (where you keep things important to you) and the system layer on the bottom (what makes the computer actually run). Most people don't care about that bottom layer, so may as well make it immutable.

Rebasing is like lifting up your top layer and pivoting it onto a new bottom layer of a similar "os". Updating is the same thing, it just pivots to an updated version of the same os. In either case, if something goes wrong, you reboot and choose the previous version and it pivots your top layer back.

It's been a while since I installed Bazzite but I remember it having an on boarding where you selected what you needed and it installed it for you. I skipped most of it. And I know Bluefin has a command you can run to install basic gaming programs. So you have options.

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[–] Mikina@programming.dev 16 points 3 days ago (3 children)

I also highly recommend looking into https://www.winboat.app/

It might be a pain to setup on Bazzite (it's probably better to just use ostree-rpm for the prerequisities), but it's exactly the same kind of magic, but for Windows apps!

[–] AldinTheMage@ttrpg.network 2 points 2 days ago

Huh, I may look into this. Sounds neat. Thanks!

[–] floofloof@lemmy.ca 5 points 3 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

Is that a compatibility layer thing, or a full Windows VM (requiring a Windows license) integrated into the Linux desktop environment? Being able to run the Affinity suite without having to switch to Windows is appealing.

Edit: There's no GPU access so it's unlikely things like Affinity Photo would run well.

[–] Neptr@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Full KVM in Docker but doesnt require a Windows license.

[–] sga@piefed.social 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

if it is not requiring license, it is either because you leave windows unactivated (because that barely has any use) or because they use some activation scripts which is illegal. it is very likely former. does it matter? not really

it does need activating and it installs an evaluation copy by default. no idea what the poster above is on about.

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[–] melfie@lemy.lol 2 points 2 days ago

Haven’t heard of WinBoat and looks pretty slick—thanks for sharing!

[–] artyom@piefed.social 11 points 3 days ago (2 children)

I still don't love that as soon as I logged in on my fresh install, Steam opened up and asked for a log in, but that is what I signed up for with Bazzite, I guess.

Yeah, it's a gaming distro and anyone who games will be using Steam, especially on Linux.

I do wish they would release a non-gaming version.

[–] dustyData@lemmy.world 10 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Bluefin and Aurora are the original distros. Bazzite is a spin of bluefin.

[–] petrichornetrainfall@piefed.social 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

uBlue is the original or base distro. Aurora, bluefin, and bazzite are spins of uBlue.

[–] dustyData@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Ublue is not a workable system image. It's the general cloud native process to make distributions. There's a bare bones starting point oci image called ublue-os. But that's like saying the hammer is the original chair. It's confusing a tool with the final product.

Sorry for the miscommunication, I was trying to provide clarity around their technical implementation.

Since they are all image/layer based (like docker or containers), i was expressing that uBlue is the base image, and bazzite, aurora, and bluefin are all layered on top of uBlue, not each other.

[–] artyom@piefed.social 2 points 2 days ago

I'm aware but those don't have what Bazzite does.

[–] MadameBisaster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Isnt aurora from the same devs?

[–] artyom@piefed.social 1 points 2 days ago (10 children)

I don't know but it's missing a lot of the things Bazzite has, like the ujust commands and OOTB configurations/optimizations.

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[–] blipcast@lemmy.world 8 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

I had used Ubuntu in the past, but ran into some wifi driver issues when installing it on my new laptop, fast forward a few years, and I was ready to give Linux another go. I read that Bazzite was pre-optimized for gaming, and I figured everything else I want to do should be relatively easy in comparison.

I've been impressed by how clean and no nonsense the interface is, and is just a solid daily driver OS. I've been slowly learning the nuances of what it means to be an Atomic Desktop, but I still get confused about the proper way to install things if they can't be found in the flatpak discovery tool. Pretty sure I have two versions of Chrome installed right now. That's not a problem with Bazzite though, just a new-to-linux problem.

[–] sga@piefed.social 4 points 2 days ago

you have 2 major package managers (ootb) on bazzite iirc - flatpak and rpm (through rpmtree). ideally - do not install anything through latter. that is the one that requires the cli. if you can not find a package on flatpak (very common if you want a cli thing, or a niche gui software, or some browsers), then try to find if it is served elsewhere. for example, as this post highlights very nicely - use distrobox. for example, use distrobox and add arch (for example), and you can get new cli stuff.

for chrome, if you have 2 versions, either you have 2 different flatpaks, or 1 from rpmtree, for that, try using rpm-ostree search chrome (or some other package name, for example chromium). you may also just want to do chro (in a terminal window) and then press tab (once or twice) to get completion options. that should help you with name of package most likely.

[–] skulblaka@sh.itjust.works 9 points 3 days ago (4 children)

Linux noob here, I've been running Mint for about a year and constantly bitching about my Nvidia card's performance vs. Windows. I have the most updated closed source drivers installed, but cooking shaders on games still takes a half hour and many games run like trash even after precompiling said shaders. Space Marine 2 comes to mind, runs like butter on my Win10 partition but is basically unplayable on Linux.

Am I hearing that I just need to switch to Bazzite and this problem disappears?? Because on God I will do that literally tonight if that's true. I had been holding out for a new batch of Nvidia proprietary drivers to hit the scene or else just resigning myself to having to buy an AMD card.

I'd expect that Bazzite and Mint would use the same Nvidia proprietary drivers without much noticeable change in performance, but to be honest I don't know jack about shit about their back end behind the scenes processes so I could be wildly off base.

[–] seitzer@piefed.social 10 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

Am I hearing that I just need to switch to Bazzite and this problem disappears??

Yes, simple as that. I use Bazzite for ~2years now on my main desktop with nvidia and a legion go. It really is "install and forget it's linux". It's almost too good to be true...let's hope the big "enshitification" doesn't follow soon.

I’d expect that Bazzite and Mint would use the same Nvidia proprietary drivers

Expect a big leap in performance, they do a lot of magic with the kernel on Bazzite. It's really fun.

[–] sga@piefed.social 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

do a lot of magic with the kernel on Bazzite

sadly, no. there are not any special kernel parameters or compilation difference. at best, these things can bring +- 5% difference (assuming a general benchmark, instead of a special synthetic benchmark). if there was some major switch you could hit which would increase performance, most distros would just press it. if most are not doing it, then it is likely because either their is not much to gain.

for example, cachy os compiles it's programmes for x86-64 v3/v4 as opposed to v1 or v2 for most distros. their have not been many extensions to x86-64 between v2 to v3, and most performance gain you get is in specific hashing benchmarks. on average, their is not much reason. as to why not all distros do it? because any software compiled in v1 runs on v4, but v3 can not be run on v2, v4 or v3, so if all distros would start doing it, then either they would have to stop serving users v3 or earlier versions (that is practically everyone with cpu before 2020, and new v3 cpus are still being made), or they would have to serve separate v3 versions for v3 folks, v2 for v2 folks and so on. that is a lot more costly, and increases software burden. even big company like microsoft is not serving different windows version forr different x86-64 versions (though they have different things, and windows 11 requires v2 or higher afaik)(it may even be v3, but not sure).

[–] seitzer@piefed.social 2 points 2 days ago

The repository itself or the build process have had no changes, with the one addition being the large set of handheld and performance optimization patches Bazzite users have come to expect. These include the latest in handheld compatibility patches (OneXPlayer, ROG Ally, Steam Deck LCD/OLED, Surface devices) and stability fixes.

https://github.com/bazzite-org/kernel-bazzite

Enough magic for me :D I'm not sure where I read about latency fixes as well, have to come back on that.

[–] skulblaka@sh.itjust.works 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Fuck yeah, heard. I've got a project to do tonight. Thanks!

[–] seitzer@piefed.social 4 points 2 days ago

During installation make sure to read up on atomic distros, there are some changes like package handling or the immutable system, but it's not a big hurdle. Have fun!

[–] AldinTheMage@ttrpg.network 1 points 2 days ago

I still had to wait for a long time for shaders to load on initial launch on some games (DA Veilguard) but performance seemed fine. I didn't have performance issues on Ubuntu so not sure about your particular issues, but another thing to consider is based on your card, the latest nvidia drivers may not be correct - I had to download an older driver package for my card (1070) as recommended by nvidia. Bazzite had me select which series of card I had when downloading the ISO, so I assume it included the older drivers for my card. I haven't actually checked the installed driver version though

[–] Lumisal@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago

Yes

I got a 3090 card and have her 0 issues so far. Wouldn't even consider another OS for gaming at the moment with how well everything works.

Even my monitor works better with Bazzite than with Windows 11.

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