I've gotten MH:W and DMC5 running without much effort in the past. Can't really think of anything in your description that would cause problems. Are you running them from an external drive? Perhaps there's some kind of file system weirdness afoot.
Might be worth deleting their prefixes in the compatdata folder and trying again. If that doesn't work maybe try verifying the game files through Steam.I am yes, though they were on the same disk as my old system, ext4 formatted, just imported into the new system. So were working before.
Battletech. Finally found a game i can settle with after straining my hand playing fighters and shooters for a whole month.
I'm not even sure if it's actually that good or I'm just blinded by my battletech fancy. At first I found it pretty clunky, and the tightly directed missions disappointing, but after a couple hours it really gets down and dirty with the mercenary management game. So fun.
I'm playing it on TV with the steam controller setup to favor the left hand lol.
I've also been playing Battletech recently. I'm only like 8 hours in but it's been great so far!
How well does it work on a controller though?
Valve developer Pierre-Loup Griffais told me that the performance work being done in Proton and DXVK has gotten to a point where the CPU overhead of translating DX11 through DXVK can be lower than the overhead in the native AMD DX11 driver on Windows
Interesting article on Forbes about W10 vs POP OS gaming benchmarks:
Slightly better on POP in some games, including one that was running through Proton, but unsurprisingly a bit lower on other games. A choice quote from the article:
There's a list on reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/Amd/comments/bvfo57/list_of_b350_b450_x370_and_x470_motherboards_with/
I have the same CPU. The only game so far that has given me trouble is Assassin's Creed Odyssey, where a fully locked 60fps seems impossible, but I expect games to start getting much heavier once next gen consoles get a better CPU. That's still a ways off, though.I was looking at benchmarks compared to my 4790K, and my CPU seems to be a ok . I think I may just stick with it a bit longer. However, I think my GTX 970 may need to be upgraded already.
There is actually, let me try to find it for you. I saw it recently somewhere.Do I have to do anything special to download all those shader pre-cache updates for games in Linux? I finally got my PopOS install to boot again, but I tried Dark Souls and it was as stuttery as the first time I played it, which was months ago.
Nappael took a self requested ban, he said this in Discord.
Bad time at work, came home and walked straight into disingenuous rubbish in the epic thread that was going at the time (the one krejlooc was banned in actually)
Thought, I can't deal with this right now
So asked for a few weeks banned
Any EGS thread is bad. At this point any PC thread that is not a community thread is a clusterfuck, all while we lose more and more members of said communities :(
Is this the same vendor or different? If it's the same, you don't have to. If it's different, if there is some conflict, your package manager should tell you.So, this is my first time installing a new GPU while being on Linux. Is it finicky like Windows. Should I be removing the drivers and reinstalling them. I caved and went to Microcenter earlier. I purchased a 2070.
So, I installed the GPU without removing drivers and started getting weird graphical glitches. I just went ahead, purged , reinstalled. Seems to run fine now. It was the same vendor as well.Is this the same vendor or different? If it's the same, you don't have to. If it's different, if there is some conflict, your package manager should tell you.
I think they don't, but I'm not sure how libgl is handled
Yeah, I don't support this. I've a problem with Snaps and using them to deliver packages, because while it moves packaging support away from the distro maintainers, it moves that to the snap developer and... that's not something I want to do, because it does exactly what I don't want: someone making my decisions for me.Manjaro just replaced libreoffice with a closed sourced alternative that can only open doc/odt files apparently...
I have a general distaste for middle-man distros anyway, so that doesn't really affect me thankfully.Yeah, I don't support this. I've a problem with Snaps and using them to deliver packages, because while it moves packaging support away from the distro maintainers, it moves that to the snap developer and... that's not something I want to do, because it does exactly what I don't want: someone making my decisions for me.
I'll just stay in my corner with Arch and watch Manjaro become something else entirely.
Truth, all around.I have a general distaste for middle-man distros anyway, so that doesn't really affect me thankfully.
Ignoring the fact I post this while currently testing out Linux Mint 19.2 Beta
The change happened for sponsorship reasons. I mean it's not like Manjaro was a fort for FOSS before, but replacing a free solution with a proprietary one with less features is kinda amusing.Not that I use word processor (and associated other office stuff), but that just seems like a really weird decision. Like, does the Libre office package not exist anymore? Or is like... Installed defaults?
(do we really need office packages installed by default anymore?)
Depends entirely on the distro, but it's also a reason why some distros just feel super bloated after install (and I say this as a KDE user!).Not that I use word processor (and associated other office stuff), but that just seems like a really weird decision. Like, does the Libre office package not exist anymore? Or is like... Installed defaults?
(do we really need office packages installed by default anymore?)
Eh, KDE these days is fairly lean, for what it does. It might have more stuff but still feels less bloated than even Gnome.