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by prmoustache
706 days ago
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> Most people aren't looking to buy new hardware and learn new tech to game. Most people don't play game. Most people that play game that isn't solitary or a web game just buy a playstation, xbox or Switch. Only a relatively small fraction of people playing AAA games use computer for that. The most hardcore one and the most willing to spend money on a game Rig. And I am pretty sure most of them aren't the least interested in dual boot because they would have a desktop gaming rig and a laptop for everything else anyway. Only a tiny fraction of gamers is probably interested in dual booting. You are part of that tiny group. Fine. The nmbl tool presented in this conference do not prevent dual booting anyway so I am not even sure why people act like they should be offended because grub might be replaced someday by something else with more capabilities. |
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https://linux-hardware.org/?view=os_dual_boot_win
It doesn't make sense to ex post facto try to justify what people SHOULD do when we can look at what in fact they actually do.
The idea that the only people that play PC games are ONLY play AAA games on their souped up rigs is also a counterfactual. People play games everything from 8 year old laptops to $5000 custom built rigs with RGB everything. You are oversimplifying the universe consists of many and varied irrational individuals not spherical cows.
Dual booting is simple and suitable for nearly 100% of machines running Linux.
Wine/Proton is suitable for nearly 100% of machines running Linux. Steam has reduces this complexity to a few clicks for the majority of titles.
GPU passthrough is unsuitable for 70-80% of configurations and by dint of complexity undesirable for nearly everyone which is why virtually nobody does this.