- I think the real gamechanger has been Vulkan and DXVK. Proton would have never taken off with OpenGL. - deleted by creator 
 
- proton is fantastic. I installed linux on my latop, just as a sort of introduction to it. But I’ve managed to run whatever games I want using Proton. For my next pc I’ll use linux - For my next pc I’ll use linux - Check my post history but that’s pretty much my #1 transition recommendation : do check that your future hardware is actually compatible. Most is… but you don’t want to risk it when it’s relatively easy to check! - PS: if you can, try to buy from manufacturers that do NOT sell a PC with a Windows installation. Ideally do buy something pre-built, try to give money to companies that even do ship with Linux installed. It’s economically and morally nicer but also insure that your setup will 100% work. 
- When you have a new PC, put it on the old one too. You could run a Jellyfin server off it it or use it as a NAS device or something. 
- I think adopting Proton was the smartest thing Valve ever did. They are going to capture 90% of gamers switching from Windows to Linux. 
 
- It would be nice though if Valve finally dropped 32 bit Steam client dependencies, and maybe made a wow64 Proton build. I’m really tired of enabling multilib just for Steam. - Would 64-bit Proton be able to support old 32-bit games? - Yeah, that’s what wow64 does. 
 
- while eac itself doesn’t depend on 32bit it doesn’t currently support wow64 wine 
 
- 7 years feels like it’s too long, but then again 1999 was only 10 years ago too. lol - Double check that math. 😜 It feels like only a few years ago, and it being a quarter century seems impossible. - … and it being a quarter century seems impossible - how DARE you?!!! lol - I have a kid that was born in 99, every year i am reminded how’s long ago it was. - TIL that some real boomers are on this site. 😛 - I was born 99. - Xenial 
- Not a boomer, but was in Uni in '99. The '99/00 new year was a wild time because everyone waited to see if something had its update missed that would cause mass chaos. - In the end nothing of consequence happened. - There was a lot of work done behind the scenes to make sure that all those systems still worked. Probably too much, but it did work. 
 
- i’m not a boomer, but i have several younger cousins that are grandparents several times over already. 😉 
 
- have another one and give them the same name and your problem will be solved. lol 
 
 
 
 
- game-changer - pun intended - I’ve been here the whole time! 
 
- deleted by creator 
- it’s wine with bubble wrap, dxvk, and a shit ton of game specific hacks - True, but that is what did the trick. No tinkering, just a flawless experience (in most cases). This changed everything. No longer I start a game in the evening, wondering if it will start or not (I worked all day, I don’t want to google what I have to change to get the game to run again…). I double click and expect it to work (and it normally does). - There are things to learn from this… - the result is a perpetually growing pile of bandaids and things never getting fixed properly whether it’s in badly behaved games or drivers or things that should get addressed in wine and won’t be - Don’t changes into proton help both up and downstream? Valve also invests into this project which obviously amplifies the # of people working on it and can only lead to more breakthrus for the side projects associated with this tech. 
- Welcome to real life software, this type of stuff runs the world, it can run my games. 
 
 
- And computers are just a bunch of carefully arranged grains of sand. 
 
- 100%, I deleted Windows partition (despite paying for it, thanks OEM deals…) only after Proton was insuring I could play the games I wanted on Linux too, no reboot required. 
- A decade ago I was whining to my friends that I didn’t like Steam because I was using Linux and Steam was really shitty on that OS at some point. I remember not being able to get the correct keyboard layout in chats, and tons of little annoyances, like not being able to choose where you install games. It was disappointing. - As someone that loves FOSS, I never really liked the model of “not owning my games” but I must admit that it works for most people that don’t care about such things. Valve made huge progress with Steam for Linux over the years, and Proton was indeed a game changer. - I have to tip my hat to them. 
- It was the last big hurdle to completely ditching Windows. If they get enterprise management solved, it’s all over with. 
- I was there playing whatever worked since the steam client linux beta 
- Was there a precursor to proton integrated with steam? I would’ve sworn my friends were bringing this up in like 2016 or 2017 and describing it as a special version of wine for games that valve made 
- deleted by creator 














