Tuesday, June 17th 2025

KDE Releases Plasma 6.4

A new version of Plasma is here, and it feels even more like /home, as it becomes smoother, friendlier and more helpful. Plasma 6.4 improves on nearly every front, with progress being made in accessibility, color rendering, tablet support, window management, and more. As this is going to be a long read, let's get right into it…

Window Management
Plasma already offers Virtual Desktops to help organize your windows and activities; and customizable Tiles you can stick windows to so they don't overlap, allowing you to see everything important at a glance.
Plasma 6.4 combines these features by letting you choose a different configuration of tiles on each virtual desktop.

You can tile two windows on your main virtual desktop, each taking up half of the screen. Then in another virtual desktop, you can place tile apps: two on either side, and the other two floating in the middle. This new feature lets you create any other kind of layout combination that best works for you.

Accessibility
Accessibility is a top priority for KDE. This work is endless, but we make improvements in every new Plasma release!

The Wayland session in Plasma 6.4 brings some new accessibility features: you can now move the pointer using your keyboard's number pad keys, or use a three-finger touchpad pinch gesture to zoom in or out.

In addition, a great deal of subtle but important work has been done throughout Plasma to improve keyboard navigation, screen reader usability, and text readability.

UI & Visual Design
Straddling the boundary between accessibility and visual design, another way of making Plasma easier to use is by increasing the contrast between the foreground and background elements.

In that respect, we've made our Breeze Dark theme a bit darker. This subtle change helps the text and user interface elements pop, making them easier to read and see.

Plasma 6.4 also darkens the background of the desktop or window when an authentication dialog shows up. This will help you locate and focus on the window asking for your password.
The energy page in the Info Center and the entirety of KMenuEdit (the app you can use to edit apps' presentation and grouping in the launcher menu) have all had their looks overhauled to make them cleaner, clearer, and easier to use.

Speaking of settings, there's a brand-new Animations page in System Settings that groups all the settings for purely visual animated effects into one place, making it easier to find and configure them.

Plasma 6.4's lock screen plays nicer with multiple-screen setups, too. The lock screen's interactive elements will now only appear on the screen that has focus or the pointer on it. And when it's time to input your password, the text entered into one password field is synced across all others, avoiding any errors that may cause passwords to be half-entered in a field on one screen, and then the rest in a different one on another screen.

Notifications
Notifications are how Plasma communicates what's going on within your system. The file transfer notification now shows a speed graph, giving you a more visual idea of how fast the transfer is going, and how long it will take to complete. When you get notified that updates are available, you can now install them directly from the notification.

When any applications are in full screen mode—like when you're playing a game, working on a critical project, or watching a video—Plasma will enter Do Not Disturb mode and only show urgent notifications. When you exit full screen mode, you'll see a summary of any notifications you missed, and they'll be right there in the System Tray for your perusal.

Have you ever found yourself talking during an online meeting, and no one can hear you because you forgot to unmute your microphone? No more! Now when an app tries to access the microphone and finds it muted, a notification will pop up.

Finally, notifications with interactive buttons will still show them in the history view.

Widgets
Widgets are the building blocks of Plasma: small programs that carry out specific tasks on your Plasma desktop. They can launch programs, track the weather, set alarms, or tell you when you have updates.

Among many other improvements, a new feature in the Application Launcher widget will place a green New! tag next to newly installed apps, so you can easily find where something you just installed lives in the menu. The tag disappears after 3 days, or after you run the app for the first time.

The Media Player widget now allows you slow down or speed up whatever audio or video is currently playing (for players that support this feature). And the Disks & Devices widget used to access internal and removable disks now checks and even offers to repair your disks if it finds errors in them.
Plasma 6.4 features many other smaller changes to the included widgets as well; explore them to see everything that's new!

For Digital Artists
Plasma continues the push to improve support for devices used by digital artists and graphic designers. In Plasma 6.4, we've made configuring the buttons on your stylus much more intuitive:
If you make a mistake while calibrating your tablet, Plasma offers an easy way to reset everything and start over. And when you aren't making art, you can still continue using your tablet, since Plasma now supports relative mode which makes the stylus behave more like a regular mouse.

Color Management
For those looking to adjust the colors for gaming or watching movies, the Display and Monitor page in System Settings comes with a brand new HDR calibration wizard in Plasma 6.4.

Plasma 6.4 can also do Extended Dynamic Range (a different kind of HDR) on screens that support it, and gives you a tool to limit color depth—again for screens that support that feature.

Finally, Plasma now supports the P010 video color format, improving power efficiency with HDR video content. In a nutshell, Plasma helps you make the best use of your fancy screen hardware!

KRunner
KRunner is Plasma's powerful built-in assistant. If you need to find something, define something, calculate something, or convert something, press Alt + Space and ask KRunner.

In Plasma 6.4, KRunner can help you visualize colors. Just enter the color in hex notation, as a hexadecimal number, or its CSS/SVG name (like "MintCream", "PeachPuff", or "PapayaWhip"—yes, those are all names of colors and not fancy desserts). Then KRunner will show you how that color looks and its equivalent name/code in many other notations.

Screenshots & Screen Recording
Spectacle, the built-in app for taking screenshots and screen recordings, looks very different in Plasma 6.4—for the better!

Press the PrtSc key and Spectacle opens directly in screenshot mode: drag a box to select a region of the screen, or press Enter immediately and Spectacle will take a shot of the whole screen.

You can also start annotating right away, by drawing arrows, blurring sections, adding explanatory text, and more.

Finally, quality has been massively improved for screen recordings using the WebM format or taken on screens using fractional scaling.

System Monitoring
Plasma 6.4's System Monitor helps you stay on top of how your system is working in even more ways.

First, the Overview and History pages have been overhauled to show more information and be more generally useful:

And on those pages, you can find usage monitoring for Intel GPUs. In addition, it can even show the GPU usage on a per-process basis for Intel and AMD GPUs. There's also a new "Background Services" group on the Applications page, giving you the complete picture of the system resources being used by things that aren't apps.

In addition, the built-in free space monitor now checks for free space on all non-cache partitions of all disks, not just a disk's Root and Home partitions. And finally, a new Sensors page in Info Center shows raw sensor data for things like the temperature of your CPUs and GPUs.

Miscellaneous
When dragging files to another location on the same disk using Dolphin or the Plasma desktop, you can now have the system always move the files, rather than being asked what to do every time.

The Plasma browser integration feature that allows you to control the playback of media in your browser from the desktop (among many other things) now supports the Flatpak versions of Firefox and Chromium variants like LibreWolf and Ungoogled Chromium.
And finally, for the more technically-minded, Plasma 6.4 adds support for a large number of Wayland protocols, including the "Relative tablet dials", "idle notify", "color representation", "FIFO", "toplevel tag", and "single pixel buffer" protocols. This will help apps integrate better into Plasma's Wayland session.

…and there's much more. To see the full list of changes, check out the complete changelog for Plasma 6.4.
Source: KDE
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16 Comments on KDE Releases Plasma 6.4

#1
teamtd11
Interesting, the screen recording was in need of improvement so looking forward to trying that out, Might save configuring OBS for a simple capture.
Also the GPU usage on a per-process basis for AMD GPUs is nice to see.
Posted on Reply
#2
JLP
Nice to see GPU monitoring support. Another nice improvement I noticed (that is not mentioned) is that the option to remove window border and titlebar has been added to taskbar entries.
Posted on Reply
#3
R-T-B
I wonder if you can set an HDR wallpaper or if it still goes gamma nuts when you try to do so.
Posted on Reply
#4
Event Horizon
Cinnamon user here. I'm interested in giving KDE Plasma a shot, especially if it's better at handling non-identical monitors.
Posted on Reply
#5
JLP
Event HorizonCinnamon user here. I'm interested in giving KDE Plasma a shot, especially if it's better at handling non-identical monitors.
Plasma is known for the most advanced Wayland/graphics support so it probably also has better multi-monitor support. To be sure you can find some ISO image of a GNU/Linux distribution that comes with recent KDE Plasma and that supports creating a bootable live USB so you can then start computer from it and check it out.
Posted on Reply
#6
_roman_
Just for those guys:

KDE is a desktop environment, short DE, for the gnu userspace and the linux kernel. One of many.
Posted on Reply
#7
Kadath
Event HorizonCinnamon user here. I'm interested in giving KDE Plasma a shot, especially if it's better at handling non-identical monitors.
I have two non-identical monitors (34" ultrawide and small 10" touchscreen monitor) with different resolutions. No issues there since forever. :)
Posted on Reply
#8
phints
Visually this looks like Windows did 20 years ago but worse. Yuck.
Posted on Reply
#9
Kadath
phintsVisually it looks like a crappier version of Windows from 20 years ago.
You really have no idea what you are talking about. Go on the KDE Store for Plasma themes: store.kde.org/browse?cat=104&ord=rating
There is just a little more over 900 possible themes. Even without themes, I can customize the shit out of it.
Posted on Reply
#10
Rover4444
Aw hell I've gotta update shit again.
Event HorizonCinnamon user here. I'm interested in giving KDE Plasma a shot, especially if it's better at handling non-identical monitors.
Make a snapshot then install your package manager's KDE package. Don't know what DM Cinnamon uses but there should be an option to try out KDE there, if not then just start sddm with systemctl or something. If you don't like it just revert back to your snapshot.
Posted on Reply
#11
Mung
phintsVisually this looks like Windows did 20 years ago but worse. Yuck.
I assume you mean Windows XP then. In my opinion Plasma 6.4 looks the same only in the way that there are similar basic elements on the desktop and inside different application windows. Visual design and finish of those elements is more refined and better looking on Plasma 6.4. I use Cinnamon myself, so I had to go and take a look what Windows 11 actually looks like. The result: in my opinion it looks worse in some ways than Windows XP, and definitely worse than either current Plasma or current Cinnamon. Ultimately these things are largely a matter of taste and also to some degree a matter of what we are used to see and use.
Posted on Reply
#12
JLP
Yay it finally made it to openSUSE Tumbleweed. Installed on the rest of my PCs/laptops and also working just fine. Was also available before for KDE Neon and Fedora. And I hear Arch also already has it.
Posted on Reply
#13
Kadath
JLPAnd I hear Arch also already has it.
That's pretty much Arch's philosophy.
Posted on Reply
#14
Mung
For a long time I have wanted to try KDE and Plasma as my daily desktop, but my attempts have always stopped to how Plasma desktop environment looks. It's not that it hasn't been pretty, but the fine details of the layout and grouping of different elements that together influence both the looks and the user experience a lot have been quite a bit off in my mind.

I used to use GNOME for 15 years until it was changed drastically with version 3, taking away a large amount of useful functionality, and moved on to Cinnamon. What GNOME always got right in my mind was the thing that I said above has been wrong with Plasma: the fine details of the layout, size and placement of elements, adjustment of the spaces between them and so on. Seldom were those things not spot on on GNOME. Cinnamon too does the visuals right usability-wise, reminding me a lot of GNOME in that regard.

Now, after a quick look at Plasma 6.4 screenshots, it seems that KDE has has begun to get those things too. The change from the version I tried the last time is clearly for the better. I’m a little busy nowadays, but some time later I may give Plasma a try again.
Posted on Reply
#15
phints
MungI assume you mean Windows XP then. In my opinion Plasma 6.4 looks the same only in the way that there are similar basic elements on the desktop and inside different application windows. Visual design and finish of those elements is more refined and better looking on Plasma 6.4. I use Cinnamon myself, so I had to go and take a look what Windows 11 actually looks like. The result: in my opinion it looks worse in some ways than Windows XP, and definitely worse than either current Plasma or current Cinnamon. Ultimately these things are largely a matter of taste and also to some degree a matter of what we are used to see and use.
Have you seriously not used Win11 or just trolling? It’s MS’s best looking OS by a wide margin. The look, the feel, fonts, incredibly smooth animations on high refresh displays. There is always room for improvement but it’s a top tier OS visually.
Posted on Reply
#16
Mung
phintsHave you seriously not used Win11 or just trolling? It’s MS’s best looking OS by a wide margin. The look, the feel, fonts, incredibly smooth animations on high refresh displays. There is always room for improvement but it’s a top tier OS visually.
I haven't used it myself, but I have installed it once for another person. Now that I think of it, I'm not so sure anymore which Windows version it was (it was some three years ago). I took a look at some screenshots before writing my previous comment, but it may be that I didn't see very good ones (and there may even have been some screenshots from Windows 10 in the mix too...). I just took a more careful look, and I have to admit that there are quite a few visual improvements on Windows 11 compared to previous Windows versions. I concentrated on the File Explorer, and the tool bar of it looks nice, as do the context menus and icons. There's still some visual incoherence between some elements, but also some improvements in that regard compared to previous versions. A setting window that I saw looked about the same they have looked for as long as I can remember, which I find surprising considering the resources Microsoft has at its disposal.

The visual layout of the File Explorer on Windows XP indeed still seems more coherent in some regards to me than that of Windows 11. The stripping off of user interface elements to make the user interface look more pure, which has been fashionable for quite some time (in other areas of design too), is backfiring in that regard. Not terribly in the case of Windows 11, but still.
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