I was wondering if steam deck’s existence made linux gaming better for you folks who do not have a deck yet game on a linux machine, as im afraid it did nothing for me at all. I’m trying to see if its failure to influence my side of linux gaming is purely anecdotal.

Thanks!

  • poVoqM
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    51 year ago

    What exactly did you expect to happen? Obviously the Steam Deck brought some more users and incentivised Valve to further improve Proton, but otherwise the Steam Deck is just another type of Linux PC. Why would that effect you if you don’t have one?

    • Matthew
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      71 year ago

      @poVoq @altair222 I think the incentivisation to improve Proton is a big part of it. To be honest, I never really had any issues playing anything in Linux in the year before the Deck, so in practice probably not noticed any difference.

      But I feel it’s hard to quantify isn’t it? Like, would Diablo 4 beta have worked without issue had the ecosystem not already been built up to encourage people to tinker and get it working?

      These kinds of intangible benefits are still positive factors I think…

      • @Prologue7642@lemmygrad.ml
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        31 year ago

        I would say that the biggest benefit is that few developers actually put even the minimal amount of effort to support things like anti-cheat in few games. I am not sure we would have that without Steam Deck.

  • @jokeyrhyme@lemmy.ml
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    51 year ago

    It’s possible that SteamOS and the SteamDeck are part of the incentive that finally made nVidia get to work on open-source GPU drivers and Wayland-compatibility

  • @jokeyrhyme@lemmy.ml
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    31 year ago

    While it ended up shutting down, the fact that Google Stadia was also a Linux-based gaming platform might also have factored into the ecosystem improvements and interest, maybe just a little bit