theonetruetom
New Member
- Nov 15, 2025
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Actually releasing the public version on Steam would do much for Linux support regardless of distro so long as it can run the latest greatest v of the Steam client. The Steam/Proton client can run a great many Windows specific games without too much fuss.As someone who is not a penguin head, what would people want to see from a hypothetical Linux build, assuming that RocketWerkz gets $20M or so to support a native build?
Targetting a specific distro? Flatpak vs snap vs appimage? Support for unique features that only Linux has?
Thank you for this clarification. I am extremely surprised.Actually, it is intended to be free (as in money, not as in FOSS), and they will not release it on Steam.
So unless they want the donation popups to be more visible than Flathub provides, it's totally reasonable for them to release it on Flathub—or they could just provide a .flatpakref with a bundled remote on their website.
Honestly, I just want a distro I just have to set up once and then just can work with it. But there are a lot of requirements for me.Have you considered Debian? it is veeeery stable, and has all the same things (in terms of packages, and package managers) you might expect from Ubuntu or Mint since they are built on Debian. I think that SteamOS might also be a cool idea if you have an all AMD system
I tried Lutris and KSA, but it was on the install where I already had the Affinity wine+winetricks thing going. Lutris threw an error, something about the wineprefix. Haven't had time to look at this in more detail.@ShadowZone vsCodium is a good alternative for notepad++, and has all the features you mentioned. I don't know about Backblaze and SyncbackFree, so yeah, linux might not be an option for you right now.
I think if you use lutris you would have a specific wine install for ksa, where you can easily add dotnet9 without conflict.
@moeggz You can easily create a usb stick with a live install to check different linux distros. If you can boot from an usb stick there is nothing to be scared of.
As Hermano said: no harm in trying it.Man I’ve been wanting to try Linux for a while but have been scared to try. Seems like these days you can get basically anything running on it it may be the time to try for real.
Even though I use it, if you're a Linux beginner, I wouldn't recommend Debian. It's an OS designed for server use, to which you can add a desktop environment to create a workstation. A bit like Alpine Linux, which is primarily designed for routers but also allows you to add a desktop environment.Honestly, I just want a distro I just have to set up once and then just can work with it. But there are a lot of requirements for me.
This hardware needs to be supported
- AMD Ryzen 9950
- All USB 3.2, USB-C and normal USB ports as well as the 2.5GbE LAN port on my Gigabyte X870E mainboard
- Universal Audio Volt276 USB audio interface
- Logitech G502 mouse
- Logitech G815 keyboard
- Xbox Controller
- nvidia 50 series GPU
- Kinda optional, but I'd really like this: a way to monitor 12VHPWR ampere value per pin (Asus GPU software does it, gives peace of mine to cable burnout risk)
- I'd like to have something like nVidia Broadcast to have live background replacement for my webcam
I disagree vehemently with the idea that installing native wine is a bad idea. I would say that installing flatpak wine is actually more problematic because of how flatpaks isolate libraries and processes from the actual host.No issues for me in Arch with a 4090. The installation for the Steam client is complicated. The installation with Heroic Games Launcher is much easier but this isn't good enough. Hacking to play a game should be a thing of the past.
The installation demands to start wine to install dotNet Desktop9. It can be done with wine by using a trick in Heroic Games Launcher, winetricks or protontricks. Installing the wine version from a distro like Debian is not a good idea. I had in the past I had too much trouble with outdated versions and it blocks disk space. So a tool like the Steam Client or Heroic Games Launcher as flatpak installation is a good idea.
Considering there are millions of Steam users on Linux with zero knowledge out there, this is an issue.
This stuff all works out of the box on any Linux distro.Honestly, I just want a distro I just have to set up once and then just can work with it. But there are a lot of requirements for me.
This hardware needs to be supported
- AMD Ryzen 9950
- All USB 3.2, USB-C and normal USB ports as well as the 2.5GbE LAN port on my Gigabyte X870E mainboard
- Universal Audio Volt276 USB audio interface
- Logitech G502 mouse
- Logitech G815 keyboard
- Xbox Controller
This is less "out of the box" but some distros make nvidia support easier, like Pop!_OS and Bazzite, and Ubuntu to a lesser extent. Note that Bazzite is immutable, so it's harder to break, but it's also harder for some things to work properly as a result.
- nvidia 50 series GPU
- Kinda optional, but I'd really like this: a way to monitor 12VHPWR ampere value per pin (Asus GPU software does it, gives peace of mine to cable burnout risk)
- I'd like to have something like nVidia Broadcast to have live background replacement for my webcam
kOffice is overlooked and pretty well developed. Depending on the Office app you're using most, there are some other open source alternatives as well. The rest of these are available as flatpaks or in native package managers.This software needs to work on it for which I know that there are Linux versions:
- Firefox
- Thunderbird
- OBS
- Steam
- Nextcloud desktop client
- Joplin client
- Spotify
- RawTherapee
- Signal
- Reaper
- I have multiple VST plugins which need to work, this will be trial and error
- Davinci Resolve
- They have official Linux support, but I think they hate Linux users
- Libreoffice
- honestly, I hate the user experience. I really prefer using MS Office, but I want to de-Microsoft myself
Depending on what you're doing, there are a lot of creativity apps around. You say you hate GIMP-- if I might ask, why? And, when was the last time you tried it? Its UI is pretty different now than it was 10 years ago.And here is software where I know there is no direct Linux version, I need alternatives or emulation:
- Alternative to Notepad++, needs to be able to:
- Syntax highlighting for multiple languages
- compare two files (diff)
- search & replace with regex
- Affinity (Photoshop alternative)
- I know a way to do it over wine and winetricks on Ubuntu
Backblaze B2 has clients that exist for Linux, running the gamut from free/open source CLI clients like Duplicity to fancy paid GUI-having clients like Duplicacy.
- Backblaze
- I am a paying customer, but they have no official Linux client. Which sucks because I really like their service (and I had to use it already a couple of times).
rsync is literally written to do this exact thing, and if your NAS runs linux or some BSD variant, it's already supported or possibly installed.
- SyncbackFree
- Basically I am using this to regularly sync specific folders from my Windows machine to my NAS
I'm not sure I understand the fear of a conflict with winetricks and Affinity-- winetricks is just a script to make managing wine prefixes easier; if you don't run it on the prefix containing Affinity, it won't make any changes that could break Affinity.As for games, most of the ones I regularly play are listed as working in the ProtonDB, so I am not too worried about that. But KSA is of course important. I haven't been able to get it running under Ubuntu with Proton and protontricks. I'm afraid there's a conflict with winetricks and Affinity which I have to use as a Photoshop alternative (no, I will not use GiMP, I really hate it).
Hello,Linux user here, mainly ubuntu and mint.
It would be nice if other Linux users showed themselves — just to get a sense of how many we are.
I salute the people of linux troubleshooting thread looking for a way![]()
it works with Lutris, just click the + and "install a windows game from an executable"... the installer will fail until you run winetricks in the prefix and "install a Windows DLL or component" and select dotnetdesktop9.Hello,
been using Ubuntu since i got forced to switch to use certain Software during my University thesis about 2 Years ago and haven't looked back. Been distro hopping on my laptop a bit since but running Ubuntu consistently on my Workstation / Battlestation and in my home lab. I would love a flatpack of the game but would be very happy with a working appimage or any other way a distribution might be possible. Can't wait to play this game!
BTW is there currently a method of running the preview build via Wine or Proton?
Chests!
Yeah, that's what I get trying going the protontricks route as well on Ubuntu 24.04 LTSGoing through the commandline using WINEPREFIX and/or protontricks gives me a SyntaxError: Invalid file magic number
Linux Mint has been very slow to receive updates, even compared to Debian. The flagship DE (Cinnamon) hasn't had anywhere near as much work put into it as KDE or Gnome over the past few years either. It was a good recommendation a few years ago, but I'd be hesitant to recommend it now, especially to someone with latest-gen hardware.Linux Mint 22.2 is the distribution I would recommend. They also have an LMDE version without the Ubuntu layer, which is directly derived from Debian and is intended for advanced users. Linux Mint is a stable LTS distribution that doesn't really require maintenance. It is suitable for all uses, including gaming. With Linux Mint, after transferring the ISO to a USB drive or DVD, you can test it in LIVE mode without installing it, and if you like it, you just have to click on install![]()
For future reference, you can just install dotnet with the installer from Microsoft's website; just run it likeFor what it's worth, I'm on Ubuntu 24.04 and the version of protontricks that was getting installed by default from the Ubuntu repos was too old. I needed to remove that and install protontricks with pipx. The older version didn't yet have dotnet9 as an option for install.
WINEPREFIX=~/path/to/pfx wine installer-name-here.exe, that's all protontricks is really doing anyway.