Hello everybody! I want to escape Microsoft and windows, and I am looking for a Linux distro. I have some experience with Unix and a very old Ubuntu distro. But that’s quite some years ago. I am looking for a Linux distribution where i can play World of Warcraft on. I mainly use Nvidia graphics (RTX 3070).

I have found some distributions that are supposed to be good for gaming. I suppose, as i am still a Linux Noob, I am also looking for a distribution which is easy to get into. Especially for an older gamer ;)

I came with these distro’s myself. What does the Linux community say?

Bazzite

Developer: Universal Blue (US?)

Drauger OS

Pop!_OS

Developer: system76 (Denver, US)

SteamOS -based on Debian 8 (Jessie) -designed to run steam and steam games -set to auto update their OS from Valve repo’s https://store.steampowered.com/steamos

Developer: Valve (US)

Manjaro -based on Arch (rolling release model for latest software/drivers) -KDE plasma desktop (Pro-tip: enable flatpak and install ProtonUp-QT) https://manjaro.org/products

Developer: Majaro (EU - Austria, France, Germany)

Ubuntu: -the go-to linux distro for millions of users, incl gamers -best for beginners and gamers who want stable well supported distro -works seamlesssly with steam, lutris, wine (pro-tip: install the gamemode package (sudo apt install gamemode)) https://ubuntu.com/download

Developer: Canonical ltd. (UK)

Nobara -based on Fedora -optimized for gaming on newer Nvidia graphics (drivers come installed) https://nobaraproject.org/download-nobara/

Developer: Thomas Crider (Denver, US)

Mint -based on debian and Ubuntu -friendly OS, works out of the box, extremely easy to use https://www.linuxmint.com/download.php

Developer : Linuxmint (French, Dutch, UK)

  • ColdWater@lemmy.ca
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    4 minutes ago

    As long as all of your drivers working fine, I don’t think it matter all that much on which distro you choose

  • HereIAm@lemmy.world
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    32 minutes ago

    I would personally recommend popos or mint. I have varying amount of experience with the others.

    Bazzite is very hyped on Lemmy, I don’t quite understand how it works, it seems good for what it is, but I don’t know if I would recommend it as someone’s first Linux daily driver.

    Manjaro seems great most of the time, until the maintainers mess something up and royally screw up your system. But that’s just things I’ve heard, your milage will vary.

    Nobara worked really well for me, but ultimately I wasn’t very comfortable to use a distro maintained by one guy, even if that guy is glorious egg roll.

    I personally use popos. I wish it was fedora based like Nobara, but you can’t have it all. Wow works straight out the box. There are appimages or deb packages for warcraft logs and curse as well, so they work fine.

  • DigDoug@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Any reasonably modern, well maintained desktop distro should be fine; whether they’re “for gaming” or not shouldn’t matter. I’ve successfully run WoW on both Debian Stable and Arch.

  • SparklingSoda@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I personally wouldn’t look for a distro made just for gaming. I’m currently using Fedora 41 on my PCs and I’ve just closed Red Dead Redemption 2 a few minutes ago, also played baldurs gate and resident evil 4.

    Fedora works great for me using it for everything

  • mageshinji@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    You can install battlenet with steam, just add it as a non-steam game and proton does everything for you. I did it yesterday.

  • Muffi@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    I play both Classic and Retail on Pop!_OS using Lutris. Chose Pop! because my machine has an RTX 3090. The setup was super easy, and I actually get better overall performance than I did on Windows.

      • Muffi@programming.dev
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        4 hours ago

        Anytime, feel free to dm me if you get stuck during setup.

        I can also recommend getting a Steam Deck for WoW. Install the ConsolePort addon to easily play with a controller. Its great for casual levelling :)

        • Lanske@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 hours ago

          Will do that! Thnx a lot, very kind of you! Been thinking of a steamdeck to play wow on. That way my wife will see me downstairs lol

  • off@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    wow is one of the easiest things to run and has ran pretty much fine since it came out in 2004 lol

    The newer battle net launcher is more difficult to run, but lutris auto installs all that for you.

  • Lembot_0001@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    Avoid small “made for [something]” distros. Use something as mainstream as possible. Debian/Ubuntu/RedHat. Select something that you like from these.

  • Codilingus@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    Do Bazzite. It will be unbeatable for just working and ease of use.

    Stay away from Manjaro for anything.

    SteamOS that Valve offers is not the same as what’s on the Steam Deck. It’s extremely dated and is what it used to be. A real distro from Valve has yet to be released.

    The best way to install WoW is using Lutris, which also comes with Bazzite. You search for and install Battle.net, then you can install WoW normally. Lutris can also add a WoW shortcut once WoW is installed, too.

    You can also just copy and paste the WoW folder from your Windows Program Files folder. It keeps all your settings and addons.

    For addons use Wowup-curse. It’s a open source addon manager that is just straight up better than all others.

    Currently, WoW needs Proton-GE to work. Using wine-staging, or the dated wine-ge, and Battle.net will have problems starting. It’s something weird with authentication and connecting online. Proton-GE contains a patch specifically for this.

    The easiest way to get Proton-GE is using Protonup-Qt if using KDE plasma, or Proton Plus if you’re using Gnome. For Protonup-QT, you select Steam, then install Proton-GE for Steam. Lutris will also be able to use it.

    Just general advice, I’d use the latest Proton-GE as the default for all Steam games.

    In Lutris set the runner for Battle.net to Proton-GE.

    Source: I’ve tried all but Drauger OS, and currently play retail WoW.

    • Lanske@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      Wow! Thanks for taking the time to answer me with so much info! Its very much appreciated!!!

  • JTskulk@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I play Starcraft 2 through Proton, it works pretty well. These days pretty much all distros are perfectly fine for gaming, maybe with the exception of Debian stable. If you’re new, I’d recommend staying away from Arch and derivatives like Manjaro. Also try to keep things simple for yourself and avoid flatpaks, snaps, and appimages.

  • Xartle@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    You may need to try a few to make the most of your hardware config. Make a few bootable USB drives, and spend an evening trying your options I’d say at least pop!os, manjaro and nobara to cover the main distro bases. But everything is pretty good these days and everything has corner cases that cause trouble.

  • Crazyslinkz@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Try each for a week. Go through the installs. Set up a thing and do a update.

    Make notes! I can’t stress this enough, want to actually learn a bit make a small note on why you like what you like and why you don’t. Ease of install, ease of finding support, ease of updating, and so on.

    Shrug I distro hopped a lot. Tried a bunch before I stick with arch. Even did manjaro and ubuntu.

    The beauty of linux is there’s a lot of options and choices.

  • suburban_hillbilly@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    I personally (I’m sure others will disagree) would recommend skipping Manjaro and maybe Pop.

    If you want to try Arch based pick Endeavor instead of Manjaro.

    It seems like new folks have a lot of trouble with Pop to me. Out of the Ubuntu-based side I’d choose Mint over the rest.

    Also don’t discount base Debian, people sneer at it because of the speed of the update cycle but the other side of that is it being the least likely to blow up on a new user.

    Full disclosure: My devices are currently split between endeavor and Debian, depending on my tolerance for things breaking. I know fuck all about Bazzite/Nobara/Fedora.

    • Lanske@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      Thanks for your reply. I never heard anything about Bazzite before, but what i’ve read, it seems to be good.

  • Mwa@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    Try using all of them in a vm and see which one you like

  • DetachablePianist@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    I just rebuilt my wife’s old Dell laptop (AMD with a super generic Intel on-board GPU). It’s now running Debian stable + KDE and WoW installed easily under Lutris (start with their Battle.net wizard). Diablo III runs as well, but with some weird grphical glitches. Wife thinks they’re cool tho, so I stopped trying to fix it. Anyway, WoW seems playable enough for her, though super crowded towns like Orgramar (sp?) occassionally crash the game.