

The game uses Anti-Cheat Expert which notoriously blocks any device running Linux, other than the Steam Deck LCD (yes, OLED is blocked too)
The game uses Anti-Cheat Expert which notoriously blocks any device running Linux, other than the Steam Deck LCD (yes, OLED is blocked too)
Degoogled version is €50 more, for whatever reason
I want my photos to be grainy, with natural lens distortion, instead of current trend of pictures being shouty to look good on social media
Not me having random urges to use old Linux laptops as servers
Tell me you haven’t read the article without telling me that
OP says the website you’ve linked cannot be reached by them (neither by me).
The covers are definitely AI generated, look at the car to the left and the last digit of the title
(https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/pictrs/image/0dc151b2-37db-480a-8621-814a6b630e2d.webp)
“slopper”
Would be nice if said app was on the Steam Store or Flatpak, rather than a download you have to do to yourself, but I guess one step at a time
So what’s the correct answer?
The throttling message is a bit misleading. In fact it tells you why your GPU can’t reach higher boost clocks, and will say either temperature or TDP/power limit
You’re using Microsoft’s dongle or your own Bluetooth one?
SteamVR on Linux as of now is a joke, features necessary to experience VR without getting nausea are missing, namely working asynchronous reprojection and correct vsync_to_photon timings.
I’m using HTC Vive Pro on Arch Linux (one of 4 SteamVR native headsets) for context.
There is an open-source alternative called Monado which does work better than SteamVR, but it’s game compatibility is a hit or miss, and you don’t get features like Chaperone/Guardian on it
Which proton version do you use?
Lucida.to but it’s for other lossless streaming services (Qobuz, Tidal, Deezer)
On phones which had Samsung’s OLED panels, so this also has happened on iPhones, OnePluses, Huaweis, Sonys (except their Xperia 1 line) etc. etc.
Wish I knew it