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what's a good distro for a razer blade 15?

Hello,

I bought a razer blade 15 laptop a while ago, and world like to install Linux on it, mostly to play games. So, ideally I'd like a distro that can make the most use of the hardware and let me play the most games, while being the easiest to use and lowest maintenance possible. Any recommendation?

31 comments
  • make the most use of the hardware

    All distros should do this equally well, and better than Windows

    let me play the most games

    All distros will be more or less the same. Games generally work or they dont. Check ProtonDB to see which games work and how well.

    easiest to use

    lowest maintenance possible

    This is how distros actually differ.

    Some common suggestions:

    Ubuntu LTS:

    • Upgrade your OS every 2 years
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • GNOME shell environment is very beautiful and fast, but very different from Windows

    Kubuntu LTS:

    • Upgrade your OS every 2 years
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • KDE Plasma Desktop is like all the best parts of windows 95/xp/7/10/11 + os9/OSX/macOS combined, improved, and made super customizeable

    Ubuntu/Kubuntu current:

    • Upgrade your OS every 6 months
    • Newer software than LTS
    • Otherwise same as LTS

    Linux Mint:

    • Upgrade your OS every 2 years
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • Cinnamon Desktop is a better looking and faster implementation of a Windows 7 style desktop

    Fedora

    • Upgrade your OS every 9 months (or else)
    • Proprietary codecs need to be added after install to play some video and music streams in your browser. It's like 3 commands copy/pasted into the terminal
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • Choice of several desktop environments (Fedora spins)

    Pop!_OS

    • Fun to spell
    • Upgrade your OS every 2 years
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • Pop_shell makes you feel like a hacker from the future, but is very unlike Windows

    I do not reccomend Bazzite, Kali, Arch, Manjaro, Garuda, Debian, or Slackware. They are all great distros for specific use-cases, but they are all significantly more work to configure and/or maintain than the suggestions i've outlined.

    I haven't tried Nobara so i cant recommend it, but from the outside it looks fine for a gaming desktop.

    Edit: I have mixed feelings on Bazzite, but it might also be a good option for someone feeling adventurous

  • My gaming rig has been running Nobara for years now, it's built off of Fedora by the developer who does the glorious eggroll version of Proton.

    It's got multiple desktop environment versions and is optimized for Linux gaming. It has a bunch of gaming-specific kernel patches and optimizations. Extra drivers pre-installed for controllers and Nvidia GPUs, etc.

    It has a very easy update wizard, I run it once every few weeks, works awesome.

    Nobara Linux

  • Normal distros

    • Pop!_OS
    • Mint
    • Fedora
    • Ubuntu

    Gaming distros

    • Garuda
    • Bazzite
    • Nobara

    ...or any other distro really. I've been gaming on vanilla arch linux. It's pretty stable and low maintenance once you're done setting it up and don't tinker much and have backups with something like Timeshift in place. archinstall script makes it really easy to install vanilla arch linux with everything essential configured.

  • I had to set one of these up for my SO a couple of years ago. I dropped EndeavourOS on it, installed btrbk and configured automatic snapshots on a schedule and before package installation/update in case she managed to bork things by pip installing things into system python.

    Fedora would probably work well too if you want a lower maintenance burden. I hesitate to suggest Ubuntu or Debian or their derivatives since you'll probably want to be somewhat current with your Nvidia drivers.

  • I've used a Razer Blade 16 last year and could never get the speakers to work no matter what I tried. Tested quite a few distros (Mint, Manjaro, Debian) and ultimately settled on Fedora. Didn't mind the speakers not working much since I used Bluetooth speakers/headphones mostly anyway. Other then that Fedora worked prefectly.

    • I never owned this model but the ArchLinux wiki confirms that it's supported, while "it is known to have very limited bios feature and limited Linux stability".

      • Can confirm that the Razer BIOS is absolutely bar bones. Never really minded that and as I said aside of the non-working speakers (apparently a known problem with Razer) it was all good.

31 comments