I’m looking into buying a new system and I wonder which of all the mainboard manufacturers you recommend for Linux in general and gaming in particular? Which ones have the best Linux driver support and which ones publish open source drivers? Are AMD or Intel chipsets preferred?

Also general best bang for the buck recommendations are appreciated!

And yes, I have googled this and I have some ideas, but I’m interested in what my fellow Lemmies think. And I also want this information to be here on Lemmy instead of Reddit or AI generated blogs. If you feel offended by this, you’re totally free to not reply and also down vote this post.

  • j4k3@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Use https://linux-hardware.org/ to check stuff. Ask questions with the links if you do not understand the reports. Everything you can build with has a proprietary bootloader, even the System76 stuff is proprietary.

  • pelya@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Check for WiFi and Bluetooth drivers compatibility first. Every x86_64 motherboard should work with Linux well, as in, it will boot and all USB/PCI Express/SATA ports will work. What you should care are peripherals soldered onto the motherboard, like WiFi, Bluetooth, extra Ethernet ports, ten years ago I would say soundcards but nowadays all integrated soundcards are supported, some motherboards have strange ports like Firewire which might not be supported, integrated videocards are now soldered directly onto CPU and not on motherboards like before so HDMI ports should all work on any motherboard.

    And yes, as the other commenter said, check that firmware update does not require some Windows program, and could be done only with USB drive and selecting some option in the BIOS/UEFI menu.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      23 hours ago

      In many motherboards, WiFi isn’t soldered on, it’s a mini-PCIe card wrapped up in a metal tin. I replaced mine on my ASRock b550 itx board, and it only took a few minutes.

      There don’t seem to be many guides out there for it, so if that’s something you may want to do, check it before you put everything together.

      • pelya@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        Good advice, but if you’re buying a new motherboard, why would you care for replacing it’s components? Choose the one that works properly out of the box.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          20 hours ago

          Then we should all buy prebuilts then, right?

          I didn’t buy my motherboard expecting to replace the WiFi, I only replaced it after failing to get it working properly. It’s apparently a common issue with this chip (and I have the same chip in another machine without the issue), which is a shame because Intel usually does well on their hardware and drivers. But $20 and 15 min or so of effort fixed an otherwise fantastic motherboard.

          I’m interested in small form factors, and there aren’t a ton of options in mini-ITX, especially for new launches. So I look for the things that really matter, and compromise on the things I can either service myself or outside work around. WiFi is one of those things.

          • pelya@lemmy.world
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            20 hours ago

            Ah, faulty hardware.

            I got more open to prebuilt PCs when I could not upgrade any single component of my home PC, the motherboard still had AGP slot. It is also an option when you are buying a PC-in-a-monitor build, upgrading anything there is a fool’s errand. But for regular PCs it was considerably cheaper ten years ago to buy every component separately, and then they just click in place like LEGOs. The chances of burning your custom-built PC are like, you need serious crab hands to mount it that poorly.

  • pogodem0n@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I am not sure what makes a motherboard Linux-friendly… I guess fwupd integration with LVFS would be nice? Still, I am happy with my MSI B650 Tomahawk, since I can just put the latest firmware into an exFAT formatted thumb drive and update with it. All my laptops in the past had only supported firmware updates with Windows-only executables. I think I really should check out Framework for my next laptop.

    • sith@lemmy.zipOP
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      1 day ago

      Having to use windows when upgrading firmware is very Linux unfriendly.

  • DesolateMood@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    Uhh someone can correct me if I’m wrong but I don’t think the motherboard cares what os you use nor does it much (if any) impact on gaming performance. In fact, the only “Linux compatible” piece of hardware I would suggest is an amd GPU, although even that isn’t really necessary anymore as several distros (PopOS, Nobara, and bazzite off the top of my head, probably more) have isos that come bundled with Nvidia drivers

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      23 hours ago

      There are certainly considerations here:

      • Ethernet - Intel tends to have fantastic Linux support, so I highly recommend Intel NICs
      • WiFi - often user replaceable (I upgraded my Intel WiFi on my b550 ITX mobo because it was faulty), so feel free to roll the dice
      • audio - less of an issue these days, but still worth checking

      And Nvidia drivers aren’t hard to install on pretty much any distro, the problem is that they’re not FOSS, so you could have issues with kernel compatibility (esp on rolling distros) and Wayland (largely seems solved?).

    • sith@lemmy.zipOP
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      1 day ago

      Actually, it is not true from what I’ve learned. For example, Intel is about to push chipset/bios upgrades to boost the performance of the new Core Ultra 9 285k. And that kind of driver can at best be open source and in the upstream kernel or at worst closed source and only installed by some windows only bloatware.