• MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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    10 months ago

    The package manager is usually tied to the distro, but the point above is to let the package manager inform your distro choice.

    So for instance, Arch (btw lol), or Manjaro, or Endeavour use Pacman.

    I’ve switched to Endeavour recently which is essentially “User-friendly Arch-based” with an installer and stuff, and it’s absolutely lovely for games. My old 960M laptop runs plenty of stuff great. :D

    On my main rig I’ve used OpenSUSE Tumbleweed for years, which is a rolling release (constantly updated) distro that technically uses RPMs, but uses its own package manager called Zypper, which I find mostly user friendly.

    Both use KDE Plasma desktop environment and it’s gorgeous.

    Alternatively, especially for laptops with hybrid Nvidia graphics, POP!_OS is alright if you’re okay with GNOME desktop environment. The updates trail behind a bit, but generally that’s supposed to make a more stable system.

    For gaming specifically though:

    Win10 is gonna be my last Windows. 11 is invasive and opinionated, and 12 is gonna have a forced Ai fetish. Gross.

    Good news: Steam games work wonderfully. Thanks to advances with Proton and all their support for the SteamDeck (which runs Linux btw!)

    For other platforms, look into Heroic Launcher, which takes a lot of the headache out of managing stuff like GOG games. :)

    With rolling releases you usually want to update cautiously and check news updates and stuff, because newer versions aren’t as thoroughly tested and some stuff might break…but you get new features faster so that’s fun.

    That being said: If you’re willing to learn a little as you go, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed is a big win in my book for getting the latest fun stuff while still being stable! It’s also thoroughly security-minded.

    And by default, it includes “Snapper” set up for you, so you can just roll the system back to a working version in the rare case something goes wrong. You can install snapper on any distro, but it comes pre-configured and ready to go, as long as you use the default “BTRFS” file system.

    I won’t get into filesystems because hoo boi…but TL;DR: BTRFS allows “snapshots” and rollbacks that don’t require literally doubling your disk space for rolling back, so it’s a great safety net.

    That being said: ALWAYS have more than one backup, in multiple locations, of anything you find important!

    Good luck and have fun. I will say, Endeavour, OpenSUSE, and Pop_OS all have great communities that are eager to help if you’re eager to learn! :)