Ideally one that is forward-thinking, gaming-friendly, and efficient.
Mint w Cinnamon DM. Or Mint (Debian Edition) w/Cinnamon as desktop.
Ubuntu or Debian based. Beginner friendly, though not limited to just beginners. Cannot answer the g#ming focused questions because I’m not a g*mer, sorry.
Ubuntu has good documentation, lots of people use it. Fedora is the other choice. They’re both good.
I recommend anything Debian-based for the same reason I chose Debian first: If you have a problem, there will be somebody else that did as well and likely fixed it. If you are new, I would suggest Linux Mint or Ubuntu. Another plus is that non-free software is available for these distributions, like Zoom and Discord.
Gaming on Linux is an active area of development, almost single-handedly done by Valve, so this can be hit-or-miss. In general AMD graphics cards fare better with drivers, while nVidia has almost comically piss-poor “official” drivers.
i always just recommend Ubuntu for brand new users. Fedora seems good too but I have less experience with it. for people who want a bit more depth of customisation I would recommend kubuntu or Nobara. I’ve been using Nobara on my main machine for a few weeks and it’s really nice, it’s tailored for use on a gaming PC so a lot of nice out of the box stuff like NVIDIA drivers and proton compatibility stuff.
I would add on that Bazzite is a good alternative to Nobara, if you want a decent fedora atomic system, that should be basically unbreakable and powered by fedora.
I used to recommend Ubuntu for newcomers, but the Snap nonsense makes for a poor experience with many major packages, such as Firefox. For the past few years I’ve been recommending stock Mint instead. I feel that it’s what Ubuntu used to be in terms of a frustration-free experience. A very gentle learning curve and extensive hardware support.
Linux Mint, Cinnamon DE, it’s Ubuntu based but has a Debian edition too. Also, in its official webpage you can download it with other DEs like XFCE or Mate if you need more lightweight options. Super easy to install and most windows users adapt quickly to it.
Steam Deck is all three of your criteria. Get a Steam Deck.
Then you can use Ubuntu for your laptop or whatever.
Have one and love it, at the risk of sounding like corpo-ganda.
Maybe it’s good to shill Valve’s linux products because it’ll encourage more people to use linux which in turn encourages valve to keep developing it since they want a contingency in case Microsoft decides to go rogue
It is good overall to do this but it shouldn’t be a priority. Valve is ultimately just another company and their interests are aligned with the bourgeoisie. We can tactically align with them when it suits our purposes and criticize them when they take positions against the people.
You would probably really like Bazzite it’s very similar.
I’ve seen this mentioned a few times here and I keep reading it as Brazzers
may wanna consider Bazzite, it’s Fedora (atomic) with added optional SteamDeck themes/ui so the experience can be familiar. there are different editions so you can get the one that loads into desktop instead of directly in to gaming for general use, with all the gaming support still available.
For beginners: Guide on how to install Linux Mint on your PC
I like Fedora with GNOME desktop environment, especially if you have a touch screen on your device.
Cinnamon DE on Linux Mint feels a lot like Windows, if that’s something you want.
Day to day, the desktop environment is a more impactful decision than the specific distro.
I mean, it all comes down to personal preference. Under the hood they’re all pretty much the same, with the exception that some distros use a different package manager.
You’ll probably want to stick with one that uses the apt package manager it’s very straightforward (all Ubuntu based distros use this).
Ubuntu is the most popular and works out of the box. Personally, I am a huge fan of the KDE environment it’s very customisable and looks super slick. Kubuntu and Neon are probably the most prominent distros that use KDE.
Pop-OS comes with Nvidia drivers pre-installed if you have their cards which is good because I fucking despise manually installing them. But I also hate how their app store functions. They’re working on revamping this, and it’s looking good, so I recommend this once they release a stable update of their new interface. This is what I use and it’s been fine outside of the app store.
Linux Mint is the most user friendly imo if we are talking casual Windows user who only browsed the web and plays games. Pop might require some CLI usage, but I don’t think you ever need to touch it with Linux Mint.
Lots of great recommendations here. You can’t really go wrong with any of them.
But since you mentioned forward thinking (and to some degree gaming friendly), I wouldn’t really recommend Mint. It’s rock solid but that implies that it’s slow moving and not very forward thinking.
Bazzite seems to be a good gaming choice. But sometimes, (rarely) these newfangled immutable distros can be a bit hard to get help for.
So I would recommend going with Fedora.
ETA: What hardware are you planning to run this distro on?
deleted by creator
Discord replacing dedicated fourms is one of the worst things to ever happen to the internet
deleted by creator
Back in my day when you wanted quick answers all you had to do was confidently post the wrong answer on linuxquestions.org
Fair enough, I don’t use discord so I didn’t know that.
PS: I do wish that they would have an open platform for support. Sadly, a lot of these gaming communities seem to be congregating over there, so yeah
deleted by creator
its not hard to set up a matrix bridge either but everyone’s too invested in the stupid spying app
An old thinkpad with Intel and Nvidia, and I would like to stick with a distro in the future once that laptop dies off.
You don’t have too new hardware so Mint (with its older kernels) wouldn’t be a problem. But yeah, sticking with Fedora (or Bazzite) seems like a better option for you
I will always reccomend Fedora. It’s definetly forward thinking while being stable, and it’s easy to game on (most distros are). DNF is also an easy package manager to learn, and looks much more organized than apt does (in my opinion) so you can actually see what’s happening. Fedora does also get updates sooner, which can include performance or driver updates.
Fedora or Mint, probably. Possibly Pop_OS!
You can try out Bazzite, which is what Valve’s SteamOS looks like if it were ever released to the public. It has the widest hardware support on Linux, updates are all atomic meaning they can be rolled back and applied easily, has a community constantly improving on it etc.
Otherwise you can install Linux Mint, there is a new major edition of Linux mint releasing this month (version 22 Wilma) so you should wait for that to release.
[Bazzite] has the widest hardware support on Linux
Wait, what? What makes you say that?
Their images are designed to work on most hardware, there’s images for nvidia cards, portable handheld gaming devices, framework laptops, ASUS laptops etc. They also have special hardware packages for specific peripherals (like razer keyboards).
deleted by creator
gaming-friendly
From what I hear, Nobara is good in this regard due to having some stuff come pre-installed. It is Fedora-based, unless I am mistaken.