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翻訳の問題を報告
Bazzite has an arch variant Called Bazzite Arch
Thank you for conceding.
Yeah I'd rather build my own gaming environment in my distro of choice.
I don't need drivers and packages spoonfed to me.
Your language defeats you.
I also never said bazzite was arch. I said LGBTQ+ people prefer weird arch variants- which they do.
There's not even a "gaming environment" to build, that's why it's such a joke. It just has some basic applications pre-installed which are readily available in any distros package manager, also available through Flatpak. There's no such thing as a "gaming distro" and marketing itself as such just further highlights my point that they're marketing to people who don't know any better.
The main thing to point out with Bazzite is it's immutable. This means the base system is write protected. This can make it a real pain in the ♥♥♥♥ to do intermediate updates, tweaks, or install a lot of things in the conventional way. Immutable distros are still mostly experimental for Linux and break a lot.
For anyone wanting a "gaming Linux" setup, pick a normal distro with a point release model (such as Ubuntu, Fedora, Suse, etc), make sure you get the variant of those that come with KDE out of the box (Kubuntu, Fedora KDE spin, etc), and use their included package managers to install the gaming apps you intend to use, like Steam, Lutris, etc. They'll even have a graphical browser to search for and install those apps through. Not even remotely complicated.
It's only really a joke if your incapable of doing those simple things.
Immutable OS's are taking off right now because of SteamOS and I don't care for it much either- but for a noob it could seem enticing.
I haven't even used Gamescope anymore. It's really only useful if you want to enable FSR features. For installing GE versions of Proton, "ProtonUp" from an AppImage (download and double click) will install those. I think almost all distros are shipping with Flatpak support, certainly AppImage support. So, all you really need to do is just get Lutris and Steam.
And if you really learn the ins and outs of Lutris, it's such a useful tool, especially for older stuff.
Gamescope has a good adaptive sync feature that I like to use.