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by codingcarpenter 1080 days ago
Honestly proton is really all you need at this point. I've completely switched over to Linux and have had absolutely zero problems. How Linux mint even found all of my drivers for me it took literally no effort.

That being said you can always check proton db to see if your games work with it

2 comments

Same, it really is amazing coming from the days of using Lokis and WineX and Wine trying to make things work. It was often a struggle but still some triple A games would work out of the box back then, COD1+2, quake 4 had a linux installer, MoH: Pacific Assault.
One exception is online multiplayer, which you'll still need a true Windows for.
plenty of proton games support online multiplayer (natively or otherwise), its just games which use EAC thats the problem. Even then it can be fixed with (what I've heard) minimal work from the developer, but sadly thats still not quite universal.

I think there are a few other anti-cheats which can be problematic, but again I think it can be worked around

Yes, the big AC's like EAC, BattleEye and a few others have optional support for proton and is simple to enable.

But many other AC's like EA's Ricochet, Vanguard or Faceit AC don't support proton at all.

Yeh see I was thinking of FACEIT because I heard reports that Battlebit (which uses FACEIT) wouldnt work on the steam deck, but checking protondb it seems it runs fine, so I guess there are workarounds.

Wouldn't doubt that Ricochet and Vanguard have no support for it at all though

You're right, they talked about adding Faceit AC, but they still need time. Once they actually implement Faceit and and thereby block Steam Deck/proton users. At that point Battlebit simply won't work anymore. (Hopefully Steam'll refund my game or BB will have good community servers.)
Oh, my assumption was that they either found a way to make FACEIT work with proton or dropped it due to the lack of support. Seems odd that they'd plan to update a game that actively eliminates a section of the playerbase, especially for a multiplayer game from a relatively small studio that relies on having a big enough playerbase for the game to function
Depends on the game, and the anti-cheat software it uses.

EAC for Linux works

If the publisher enables it, yes. This isn't universal yet.
Another is peripheral support. I have a trackir which doesn't really work right in Linux on the games I'd like to use it. It also takes a lot more fiddling to get even supported devices (like my Logitech gaming wheel) working correctly.

And that's without even considering vr goggles...