- Joined
- Oct 6, 2018
- Messages
- 220 (0.09/day)
System Name | SALTY |
---|---|
Processor | A10-5800K |
Motherboard | A75 |
Cooling | Air |
Memory | 10Gig DDR133 |
Video Card(s) | HD 7660D |
Storage | HDD |
Display(s) | 4k HDR TV |
Power Supply | 320 Watt |
Bored ? give yourself a Linux gaming build
Having been a Microsoft windows User since windows 95 all the way to windows 10, with some playing around with Linux and steamOS in between, I feel Linux has come along really well.
I have been messing around with a few versions of Linux like OpenSuse, Ubuntu and Mint Cinnamon, I didn’t like Ubuntu as much as Mint so opted for that and steam.
OS install was easy, although Note : i had to disable secure boot in the motherboard BIOS and enable legacy support before i could install Linux Mint.
SecureBoot is not Supported as far as I am aware.
Graphics card drivers where easy to install, the O/S does everything for you.
Once the O/S was installed and updated (which was quick it didn’t take ages to update like windows can) I just used the driver manager program and selected the Nvidia driver for my 1050ti and mint done the rest.
Installed Steam using the software manager simple as that.
I'm not saying use your Main PC for a Linux gaming PC
although if you have a second PC or parts to build a second PC then it's a grate way to give yourself something different to play around with when those dull PC days are floating around.
Once you have your Linux box up and running just google gaming on Linux or benchmarking and have some fun exploring what’s out there these days
it can put some spice back into your PC mood if ya get bored with windows and feel like learning/messing around with the same things but in a different way, for me it kind of made the old things feel new all over again.
have fun
Having been a Microsoft windows User since windows 95 all the way to windows 10, with some playing around with Linux and steamOS in between, I feel Linux has come along really well.
I have been messing around with a few versions of Linux like OpenSuse, Ubuntu and Mint Cinnamon, I didn’t like Ubuntu as much as Mint so opted for that and steam.
OS install was easy, although Note : i had to disable secure boot in the motherboard BIOS and enable legacy support before i could install Linux Mint.
SecureBoot is not Supported as far as I am aware.
Graphics card drivers where easy to install, the O/S does everything for you.
Once the O/S was installed and updated (which was quick it didn’t take ages to update like windows can) I just used the driver manager program and selected the Nvidia driver for my 1050ti and mint done the rest.
Installed Steam using the software manager simple as that.
I'm not saying use your Main PC for a Linux gaming PC
although if you have a second PC or parts to build a second PC then it's a grate way to give yourself something different to play around with when those dull PC days are floating around.
Once you have your Linux box up and running just google gaming on Linux or benchmarking and have some fun exploring what’s out there these days
it can put some spice back into your PC mood if ya get bored with windows and feel like learning/messing around with the same things but in a different way, for me it kind of made the old things feel new all over again.
have fun
