After updating CachyOS, I am unable to play games as easily as before. How do I fix it?
When I first installed CachyOS, my mind was blown away by how quickly and conveniently I could start playing my Windows games with it. With its proton-cachyos-slr wine executable, it was only a matter of setting the game executable and runtime locations in Lutris and I could start playing the game immediately.
However, ever since I updated my system with sudo pacman -Syu in the beginning of May, almost every game stopped opening like it used to. Of those games, almost half of them would simply not open at all with any tweaking. The rest of the games eventually started to run but some of them were hit by performance degradation severe enough to not be playable.
I tried to search for the cause on the CachyOS forums and wiki. I managed to find some posts somewhat discussing this issue, citing issues with the new kernel or the proton-cachyos-slr package. Unfortunately following their proposed solutions like downgrading proton-cachyos-slr or tweaking runtime settings in Lutris didn't fix the problem.
Eventually I moved on to the CachyOS documentation, mentioning an option of using an alternative wine executable wine-cachyos. It wasn't available as a regular executable option and had to be called manually, but eventually it allowed me to play most of my games like before.
I don't feel comfortable with this setup since the entire implementation feels like a hack instead of being an in-built feature, requires additional configuration process for every new game added and still doesn't allow me to run some of my games that I have spent most of my playing hours on. I have been experiencing this for almost 2 months and I have been contemplating my decision to update my system.
Is there a way to go back to how my system was before without resorting to snapshots or a fresh installation? I don't expect solutions as you would do in support forums; I am just in need of advice on where to start looking to solve my concern. If you need debug info or context, I'll happily provide them.
Use :
pacman -Q —infoto see what was recently updated.Then roll back the updated packages using -U. You should still have the old version downloaded- usually in /var/cache/pacman and you can point to the version you want. But you’ll have to figure out which package did it or roll them all back.
Welcome to Linux!
This is why many people do not recommend cachyos (I use cachyos)
That being said if you stick around and resolve these issues on your end (make notes) you will become way more well versed in using Linux machines.
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Thank you for letting me know about this group
Why not restore from backup? That's what it's there for. You don't have to roll back absolutely everything. The rare times I have this kind of issue on Endeavour, I restore from backup and then upgrade packages one at a time until I figure out which one broke my shit. Then I just ignore that package for a while and update everything else.
Have you updated since then or didn't for fear of making it worse?
I haven't since then. I only did back in May just as a precautionary measure against the multitude of Linux vulnerabilities and exploits being announced that month, else I wouldn't have bothered.
I'd bet money an update will fix it. Why don't you update regularly?
What is your system? Cachyos is an arch derivative with some cutting edge optimizations that are supposed to run well on very modern PCs. On slightly older ones you are better off with either pure arch or even Mint
It's a recent budget-tier model made for gaming. It may struggle to play AAA games but works exceptionally well for the handful of games I regularly play. Gameplay wise the experience in CachyOS is virtually same as when I used Windows before. The rest of the OS feels snappy and responsive throughout so I don't have any complaints with that.
Budget tier made for gaming? Ok...
Anyway unless you share more about your system like processor and graphics card nobody can help you.
As a final note you might want to verify you don't have some supply chain attacked aur packages if you installed stuff from there.
Maybe try asking in a more linux oriented community too.