Spyke
lemmy.ca

Awesome stuff. A nitpick I have about the page though is that if it's meant to be a highlight real of the properties of KDE that appeal to gamers, the section on classic games shouldn't be an exhaustive list, and might instead be a summary with some examples followed by a link to the larger catalog.

33
aboblareply
lemm.ee

Agree, this section felt too long while reading

2

It’s nice to see some love shared towards Valve who have been incredible with sharing countless improvements upstream. KDE has benefited from Steam Deck development with improvements such as Discover, faster detection of new icons after app installs, and better udev event handling.

If only other vendors making their own distros had a policy of pushing upstream rather than forking. And with Valve introducing millions of users to Plasma and putting a Linux Desktop in their hands, it is truly fantastic times for Linux right now (HDR support, DXVK, VKD3D-Proton, Proton itself, futex, case insensitive filesystem ext4, spinlock, btrfs same-fsid, kdumpst, Mesa Vulkan driver, ACO, async page flip, gamescope, xdg-desktop-portal improvements, Udisks improvements, Network Manager, ALSA, Pipewire, SDL improvements).

All available to all distros thanks to Valve. It’s been over 10 years since they committed to Linux and they have truly put their money where their mouth was.

21
mastodon.social

@[email protected] @[email protected] A suggestion maybe, but users who have hybrid gpu setup like me intel/amd to have option to open an application or .desktop shortcut in dedicated gpu like in GNOME. I tried it using cli everything works just missing a GUI option like in Gnome. And to make the application always open in dedicated gpu, a change in PrefersNonDefaultGPU=true in .Desktop file is all that needed. I hope that helps you guys or anyone looking for a solution to a similar setup like this.

10

Yup, and default GPU selection (for using HDMI connected to a Laptop's dGPU) needs to be added as a default widget when installing on these systems!

I've been using Envy for swapping GPUs about when needed and it works fine, but new users don't have that knowledge up front, sadly.

3

Maybe this doesn't exactly answer your question, but I launch all my games through Lutris, and have it set to always use dedicated GPU when launching a game.

1
zakireply
cdrom.tokyo

@kde @kde Do you have something for android games emulation?
On windows, LDPlayer works pretty well, but I couldn’t get it to work through Bottles on linux.

1

@[email protected] @[email protected] Heroic Launcher (an open source client for epic, Amazon games and gog)
BAR - Beyond all Reason (sci-fi RTS built on the open source spring engine)
Ultrastar Deluxe (Karaoke-Partygame, similar to SingStar, but extensible with new songs through simple text files)

1

@[email protected] @[email protected] SuperTuxKart! Also I think you could also highlight emulators.

Not free and open source games but I think the guide should focus more on Steam Play (maybe even show a video of how just clicking play works on a AAA game) and Heroic for Epic Games (Many people may have free games they acquired from Epic Games)

1
dormi.zone

Please consider adding the Heroic Games Launcher to the page. It's a commendable project that gives GOG customers a convenient way to play their DRM-free games on Linux.

9
lemmy.world

I feel like this is a dumb question but I just want to be sure. I'm assuming this is a general guide for pc that includes steam deck. Is that right?

7

Yes. The Steam Deck is there because it is a game-oriented portable PC in a console case that happens to run KDE's Plasma desktop, so it is a good option to enjoy games AND KDE software.

4
lemmy.ml

After all these years I still don't know what the difference between KDE and Plasma is.

2

@emanresu

"KDE" is a community of volunteers that makes and distributes Free Software.

"KDE Software" is all the apps, frameworks and libraries the KDE community produces. The KDE Software includes something called "Plasma".

Plasma is a desktop environment for UNIX-like operating systems (e.g. Linux and BSDs) developed by the KDE community.

Hope that helps.

10
lemmygrad.ml

As far as I understand, Plasma is the Desktop Environment and KDE is the organisation who develop and maintain it.

4

@[email protected] the video on this page is 1440p with a 15k kbit/s bitrate. It is very tolling on low end devices (especially mobile) or non hardware-accelerated renderers, to the point it makes playback impossible.

Consider reducing the bitrate to ~3k kbit/s and video quality to 1080p/720p, or even automatically change the quality based on screen/window size.

@[email protected]

2

You reached the end