Steam Survey For July Shows Linux Use Approaching 3%
Steam Survey For July Shows Linux Use Approaching 3%

Steam Survey For July Shows Linux Use Approaching 3%

Steam Survey For July Shows Linux Use Approaching 3%
Steam Survey For July Shows Linux Use Approaching 3%
Still better than gog as they don't support any Linux pcs. All my saves are gone thanks gog.
GOG games work under wine (just not gog galaxy), did the folder where the saves are locally stored get corrupted?
The way things are you can't get your cloud saves unless you bother their support. I have switched from Windows 10 to Linux as 10 was my last OS. I don't support the way that Microsoft has forced AI onto their devices and security issues with the co-pilot. Wanting gaming to work just as well on Linux as it does on Windows doesn't sound hard yet it is missing quite a few things that Windows did. Such as being able to have any store run or being able to have mods work without having to run the command line just to install a tool that then doesn't work just because I installed the game using a different app store and isn't explained anywhere. Like why does snap install steam in a completely different place than flatpack or yar or discovery. It has been a headache just to get to where I can find a mod then download a mod and have a mod manager know where to look to install the mod into the game and be able to play it. How the hell am I suppose to recommend using a Linux disto to others that want to leave Microsoft behind if things are like pulling teeth just to get the same functionality as the OS that they just left? Sorry for the rant it just sucks trying to switch as a gamer that likes to mod their games.
Heroic works. But I agree, I wish GOG embraced Linux directly.
Gog frustrate me. It seems that Linux users and people who dislike DRM are natural bedfellows, yet they continue to not support Linux even after saying they'd bring Gog Galaxy to it.
Now I'm sure people will reply with "why don't you just configure bottles, why don't you install Wine and these 30 prefixes, why don't you install Lutris", but all of that has quirks, extra set up time, and extra complexity.
I don't want to battle my PC, that's half the reason I moved from Windows in the first place. I just want to open the launcher, click install, then click play and have it work. Steam has that going for it.
Now I'm sure people will reply with "why don't you just configure bottles, why don't you install Wine and these 30 prefixes, why don't you install Lutris", but all of that has quirks, extra set up time, and extra complexity.
But you have to install a launcher no matter what. Why does it matter if it's Heroic or GoG Galaxy?
Also, they kick back some money to Heroic if that's being used, which is nice. I don't know if anyone else does that. I think the "CDPR doesn't support Linux" argument is overblown. Sure, they could do more, but it all takes time and at the expense of working on something else.
You can run the launcher in Bottles
Also it supports exporting
Do I need to start steam at least once a month to show up in the stats?
These are the results of the monthly Steam Hardware Survey which polls just a small percentage of users. You will be notified by the Steam client if you have been chosen for a particular month and you can opt in or out at that time. My account is 20 years old and I've gotten the notification maybe half a dozen times, it doesn't happen often.
Unrelated to their question but I think Linux users would be more likely than windows users to opt out, when presented with such a prompt.
Contrary to that, for whatever reason I get a hardware survey 2 times a year or so. (Running Linux for 8 years). I think it might have to do with some algorithm based on play time or something. There is little sense for steam to select a steam account that is completely inactive so it must take that into account somehow