this post was submitted on 08 Jun 2025
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Hi! Absolutely none game with Steam Proton doesn't works! But when I use Wine-GE with Lutris (or just use Wine-GE instead of Steam Proton) - everything works fine! Where's the issue may be? ๐Ÿค”

OS: Devuan

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[โ€“] sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 0 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago) (5 children)

If you are new to linux, and you want something that basically 'just works', I'd suggest you try Bazzite first.

It is much easier for a person with little linux experience to use.

Linux is kind of infamous for allowing the user to have the ability to customize and alter basically every aspect of the OS.

This is great for very experienced linux users, but it can often lead newer linux users to accidentally ... basically destroying their OS.

Bazzite has good functionality, comes with pre configured tweaks to make gaming performance better, comes with apps gamers commonly use, much much easier... and, the way it is designed, it basically has a bunch of built in safety mechanisms to make it much more difficult to break the OS.

I have never actually used PikaOS... if you are considerably experienced with Debian based distros, I'd guess you could probably handle it...

But if you are brand new to linux, and mostly just want something that works for games, and other fairly common desktop apps?

I'd go with Bazzite.

If you do decide to switch OSs, please remember to make a backup copy of all your personal files on a seperate harddrive before you make the switch.

On the other hand... you could wait it out and see if other people in this thread can actually troubleshoot and solve your problem.

Personally, I am doubtful they will be able to, but I do not know everything, and I could be wrong, perhaps there is some fairly straightforward fix.

[โ€“] HungryLemon@lemmings.world 2 points 15 hours ago (4 children)

comes with apps gamers commonly use

What are these apps? Because I don't use Discord or other "not-privacy"-friendly apps. I use only Steam of these ๐Ÿ˜…. Because from Steam I only plays in FA with my friend. For communication - I use Mumble for example.

it basically has a bunch of built in safety mechanisms to make it much more difficult to break the OS

Is this actually Linux? ๐Ÿค”

please remember to make a backup copy of all your personal files on a seperate harddrive before you make the switch

It's too late ๐Ÿ™ƒ

Personally, I am doubtful they will be able to, but I do not know everything, and I could be wrong, perhaps there is some fairly straightforward fix.

I also already doubt this ๐Ÿ˜Ÿ. And I've already cleaned that machine.

[โ€“] sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago) (3 children)

https://docs.bazzite.gg/

What are these apps?

Well, you have things like EmuDeck, for emulating console games,

Lutris, for an alternative, non Steam way to run games via WINE or Proton,

Protontricks to help manage and configure WINE and Proton...

A whole bunch of other stuff that may or may not interest you.

Is this actually Linux?

Yes, it is, it is built off of the Fedora Atomic model.

So... the simple explanation is that the core operating system is read-only, unalterable, in most situations.

The core libraries of the OS are managed by the developers, who make the 'recipe' of all the core stuff, and update it and occasionally add to it... the user can override this and add in new core libraries, but it is highly advised against, and the terminal will yell at you that you are probably doing something stupid when you try.

That being said, if you do mess up the core libraries... you can use

rpm-ostree rollback

And that will revert you to the last, stable, bootable configuration, which it automatically keeps backups of, locally.

Then, almost all applications and software are run through flatpak, which keeps them self-contained, so if they break, it is only them that break, not your whole system.

If you want to do something that requires more control over a linux in a tradtional linux sense... Bazzite comes with DistroBox, which basically allows you to have multiple linux oss download their own libraries in their own box, and then you can do more advanced tinkering in there.

(technically it is quite complicated, as i understsnd it, distrobox is basically ... customized, fancy docker images, if you are familiar with docker)

It's too late ๐Ÿ™ƒ

sigh

I tried.

I tried to warn you!

I also already doubt this ๐Ÿ˜Ÿ. And I've already cleaned that machine.

Welp.

No turning back.

It looks like you are prepared to go all the way.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=-00uQzXyujI&t=152s

lol

I.. I hope you do already know how to... flash an iso to a usb drive, and that you have not just wiped out your only means of downloading said iso.

Good luck!

[โ€“] HungryLemon@lemmings.world 2 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

As I know - Red Hat developed SystemD? Fedora - is Red Hat, Bazzite - is Fedora?

[โ€“] sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago)

I... think SystemD has been around for quite a while, I am not sure who developed it originally.

20+ years ago, Fedora emerged out of Red Hat EnterpriseLinux, basically as the not business oriented, general use version of Red Hat.

The details are complicated, but by now, Fedora has advanced so much that RHEL is actually based off of Fedora; they use the more mature parts of Fedora that have proved to be very stable.

Bazzite is based off of Fedora, specifally the system Fedora uses for Atomic versions of Fedora. Like I tried to describe earlier, the Atomic variants of Fedora take a different approach and try to section off the core OS, keep it safer and more stable, and provide different kinds of containers or boxes for the user to run apps in, or experiment around in.

Bazzite is not officially a Fedora Atomic distro, made by the Fedora project... but their whole Atomic system is open source, so the Bazzite team uses it as a basis for their even more gaming focused OS.

Sort of similar to how PikaOS or Devuan or Ubuntu or PopOS! are based off of Debian... or the modern SteamOS that steam deck's natively run on is based off of Arch.

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