Great video! I'll have a look at the changelog. I switched from windows to Nobara 2 weeks ago and was a bit lost on how to run the games (which version of proton, differences between wine and proton, shader cache issues.... ), and I've learned a lot thanks to your videos, which I really appreciate. So thank you and happy new year from France 😊
In two weeks you should have learned how to run your games, you should've needed Nobara. I've noticed that most of you guys that switched don't want to learn how to use Linux you just want a Linux version of Windows.
The "Host Remote Play" shortcut restarts Steam with the pipewire flag, so that the video/audio can be streamed properly through pipewire to another client since Wayland has security settings to prevent spying. It isn't required if you log into the system using X11 and it is not perfect, as some games don't output properly anyways.
Hey you may already know this but a quick hint, with all these different distros you’re testing out. If you have a large flash drive or sd card like 64gb use something like ventoy to be able to store multiple ISO’s to one drive rather than flashing it for each distro. You’ll be able to choose which one you want to boot into by booting to the flash drive/sd card. It’s a great way to flip between them and you can always just drag and drop more iso to the drive once you flashed ventoy onto it at anytime. Great work on this channel. I’ve watched like 20 videos in the last 2 days
I would have to agree, Nobara is top notch out of the box for gaming and content creation. It is one of the most responsive and functional desktops I have ever used. I am used to the old official release with customized gnome and that was my shindig. There are plenty of Distros that work out of the box but Nobara is cool and made by someone who really understands proton. This man made playing Re2 remake amongst other RE engine games possible way before proton officially supported it. The only other Distros I have used that come close to Nobara is Garuda Gnome. Fedora has come so far recently and fedora based distros are awesome. Cutting edge is paving the way! I am about to give Nobara 39 a shot and plan on installing and playing some Re4 Remake. Thankfully I have an all AMD machine so my Linux experience is mostly headache free. Awesome video my friend!
I have been a Microsoft user from the first 286 cpu. But I have switched over to Nobara part time. I have the the new 39 and it has been grate. I'm getting around in it almost as well as Windows.
Happy new year aswell Yes obs works well on nobara, if you use the obs version that is provided under nobara it will work great, or you can go the flatpak route aswell which also works well
I dropped windows back in September for Nobara 38 KDE Plasma and it has been great so far. I'm wondering if it is worth upgrading to Nobara 39 at this time.
I'm on Nobara right now and what can i say. Every time when I boot Nobara something can going wrong. Sometimes it just stuck and you have to hard reset. Sometimes everything(even the mouse move) lags after booting. But sometimes it works fine. I didn't find a pattern why it happening, just rebooting my system until it will work. I will give a chance for 1-2 weeks and then probably will switch back to Debian.
Thank you for your videos. Since i'm a newbie compare to others, I've learn a lot from you about Linux Gaming. Nobara is great, one of favorite distros. I don't know why, my pc doens't like KDE very much and since I have to use it for work, i've changed back to OpenSuse Tumbleweed Gnome. But it's just what works for me right now, Nobara is a great distro :)
Ublue and Fedora Silverblue is really great if you don't want to mess with nvidia drivers and also Asus kernels are included for gaming laptops and i must say its on par with PopOs in battery life. Also supergfxctl is included when selecting integrated or hybrid graphics.
Tried today. Had issues installing Nvidia drivers. Software updater was acting weird as well as it constantly showed updates were available although there weren't.
I also had the update bug, I read somewhere you have to delete one of the mesa packages and then try again? That seemed to fix the issue with the pending updates and everything installed fine
I've always ran into one issue or another (or so much to pull your hair out over the years) trying run games with a Linux distro on a hybrid laptop. Pop has been close to flawless for me the past couple of years. But wanting to try KDE (that works), being a huge fan of GE and watching your review, I'm stoked to give Nobara a try. Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts with the community!
@@linuxnext Hmm maybe. No problems with openSuse, Ubuntu. I stick with ubuntu for now. That works with the nvidia drivers, Windows, Steam. But nobara looks interessting. I can install nobara but after a sucessfull installation i only get a grub2 command prompt. Maybe its because of my SSD, and HDD layout with several partitions...
@@aster934 could 100% be, i dont have multiple partitions made so i have never had problems with nobara but secure boot is not allowed with nobara as its kernel has custom patches applied that dont work well with secureboot
@@K1NGSSTH seems pretty good, nobara will use wayland by default and nvidia sometimes can be a little iffy on wayland so if you have issues try x11 by loggin out and switching it on the bottom left when your on the login screen. Good luck!
yeah i dont see why not, arc gpus tho arent rlly good enough for everything yet on linux as intel is changing a lot of their drivers in the kernel for intel hardware and they are working on anv improvements in mesa which is their vulkan driver that is used for gaming, right now you have to use their older i915 kernel driver and vulkan extensions that dont exist so you cant play dx12/vkd3d games yet, only some. besides that you should have a good time, the i915 drivers + anv are good enough for everything except playing dx12 games. nobara likes to use newer packages so you should have the best experience that you can get for your hardware on linux
I have an XFX Speedster Merc 319 6900 XT gpu and Intel I9-9900K with 64gb ram and I want to switch from Windows 11 to Linux permanently. My issue is I have tried Arch and it didn't install correctly twice so I ditched it. I then tried Kbuntu and had issues with it as well after restarting my pc. What I see is more people are using Linux Mint for gaming as well. My big question is which Distro do I go with that's easy for new beginners like me and my main thing I do on my pc is, play video games from GOG and Steam and some Epic Launcher. Then the normal stuff browse RUclips for music videos and watching my favorite videos. I'm a home user no work related stuff just mostly for entertainment banking online and stuff like that. Also I have an Xbox Core Elite 2 Controller and It must work with Linux and my Steelseries Nova 7 headset also needs to work with Linux. Any help is greatly appreciated thanks guys and LinuxNext 😊👍
🙂 Hi friend, do you have any idea why the mouse pointer hangs up intermitentaly, i can make it hang by simply moving the steam icon on the desktop, and i've seen the same problem on two other of my desktops, something really weird about this distro, i tried Peppermint OS and its doesnt hang the mouse pointer, so its definitely something with this distro, i'm surprised no one else has noticed it?
on both my msi z690 i7 12700 working fine in windows 11 and Peppermint OS but intermittent freezes in nobara, on my gigabyte z690 i7 12700 is seems to be running nobara just fine, maybe has something to do with the type of motherboard? but yeah its strange ive been googling around and nobody really mentions the intermittent freezing problems, it seems to be a hit and miss distro for the moment, I just tried Regata and so far has no intermittent freezing on the msi board 🙂 @@linuxnext
I have used Garuda and i think it can be a great arch based distro for gaming but for me the theme that is applied is too flashy lol. i feel like im in a candy shop 😂
It is a very nice distro if you like the SteamOS experience. Something to keep in mind, when booted in Game mode on Bazzite, you can get system updates through Steam interface. It does take a while to apply the updates and it will not be able to tell you what has changed, as that update system change log is controlled via Steam and cannot be changed by the Bazzite team.
Never heard of this one before, & considering it's primed for Nvidia it probably wouldn't be much use to me now- would have a few years back before I swapped everything over to AMD. I've been using Garuda dr460nized (the KDE "gaming" ver) for about a year now, & it includes even more than this distro & auto installs missing dependencies etc; as well. Can't say whether it's better or not as I've never tried Nobara, but it seemed easier to pickup. I also set up a system for my niece, (6yo) using ChimeraOS, on an older McDonalds Slimline "KVS Station" PC (AMD on/die GPU) so she could run her steam & GOG games I got her, like Autonauts. That was so simple, she can do just about whatever she needs w/o me having to show her now. She's starting to learn how to get around & update things in the Terminal. Last time I visited she asked me: "Why does linux go so fast but windows is all poopy?" I could help but crack up.
The startup gui helper has some info about Davinci resolve addons and Blender HIP addons. But AMD has only released HIP support for 7900 GPU's. This is fine, you can disable HIP render in Blender. But if OpenCL support is installed then some apps just run into error on AMD hardware. AMD dropped OpenCL support many years ago, they supply ROCm software on very few devices on temporary basis. If you look Geekbench ML (cross-platform AI benchmark that uses real-world machine learning tasks) test results, then AMD 2023 laptop Zen 4 CPU's are 90 times slower than ipad iphone. Preinstalling a lot of addons on unsupported hardware will make apps run slower than on native c++ mode.
I use Garuda and am happy with it. I wanted badly to try Nobara but it simply doesn’t work after doing updates. Garuda has been stable so far, is easy to use, and has everything you could possibly need for gaming preinstalled. I keep hearing people say stuff like “Arch is hard”, but I’m a complete newbie to Linux and find Garuda easier to use than any other distro I’ve tried (except Mint. Mint is also easy for me at least). Like he said, though, use whatever works best for you. I’m only putting my experience so as to contribute to the feedback.
@@Faelandaea after updates as?Also I hear bad things about arch based distros like manjaro and garuda being "too bloated" and holding back true arch experience.
@@linuxnext I installed Garuda OS and when I launch steam runtime,steam native is launched as guessing from name in staus bar of fhe steam window.Is it a problem?
hey, i wanna install this on an external hard drive and only boot up from it when i have the drive plugged in. what steps should i do different to make it so i can boot into my windows os which is my main os (for the time being) when the drive isnt plugged in and then when i plug the external drive with nobara installed i can switch to that?
Well when you install nobara on that external drive you would need to put your efi boot partition on your main drive so that when you want to boot into nobara your grub isnt missing
I can't get usb gamepad to work with Xbox cloud on browser. Had to install Windoze on a separate partition just for the PC Pass. Have you ever come across this problem? Same problem with GeForce Now on web browser as well.
Vrr yes in kde wayland, hdr no BUT will be available next month with plasma 6 :) And I have tested hdr on my monitor (hdri) under plasma 6 and it works wonderfully
Works out of the gate. Xbox 360 should use xinput and that works as i have a 8bitdo sn30 pro plus and it shows up as a 360 controller on steam and emulation software
If you switch to x11 you can change it in your kde settings in color and Nvidia should have a color setting in their control panel on x11 Their is also a application that i remember called vibrant linux so if you search for it in discover you can probs find it, rlly good simple app for enhancing color saturation flathub.org/apps/io.github.libvibrant.vibrantLinux
How well does it work with Laptops that have hybrid AMD Integrated with Nvidia RTX dedicated? Just bought myself a new SSD and I'm thinking about giving Linux another shot.
It will automatically detect when to use a dedicated gpu. im pretty sure the rest of the operating system runs off the integrated and then when you play games it will use your dedicated gpu, dont count me on that tho as iv mever used a hybrid laptop before Im also pretty sure it has a package to allow you to change it to full dedicated gpu or hybrid mode in the taskbar of kde plasma
@@linuxnext This is nice, I actually would like to have both options, as sometimes you can squeeze more performance when going full dedicated gpu (at least on windows). Thank you.
I had issues with Fedora 40 not recognizing my laptop's GPU, Windows 11 also gave me this issue when I upgraded but you have slightly more robust options in how to fix it. Nobara works great with my laptop though and immediately recognized it and also installed the Asus drivers for other features
I looked at Nobara a while ago in both a virtual machine an older laptop. I prefer the KDE version, but it is an excellent OS. At the moment, I'm using Garuda on my newer laptop.
I'd like to try it but when I first booted it, found i needed to use the no graphic option for installer, now i still can't boot into it without a black screen, assuming it doesn't like my 3080. But i can't find out how to boot with no graphic drivers to try and get the propriatary driver's
If you choose the nobara nvidia iso then they are preinstalled, When you get to black screen do ctrl, alt f3 Then after login do sudo dnf update nobara-repos --refresh sudo dnf4 config-manager --set-enabled nobara-nvidia-new-feature-39 sudo dnf update --refresh akmods After your done restart If that doesnt work with the new drivers, downgrade to 535 by doing sudo dnf4 config-manager --set-disabled nobara-nvidia-new-feature-39 sudo dnf remove kmod-nvidia* sudo dnf distro-sync --refresh akmods
I tried installing every linux distro and my brightness control wont work I can feel my screen is dim on every distro plus I tried every distro possible except nobara I have asus tuff a17 laptop with nvidea rtx 3050 ti and amd ryzen 7 5800h integrated gpu I tried every fix on the internet but my problem not solved :/
So you have or havent tried nobara? And what about desktop environments on what distros There is a asus driver patch on nobara so definitely give it a try with kde plasma There is also a gui for this after installing the drivers which are preinstalled on nobara called rog-control-center
@@linuxnext I haven't tried nobara yet I'm confused if its a hardware or distro issue since I tried alot of linux distros I just want to leave windows but this issue is just not letting me
@@mellowww2222 well if your using any LTS linux distro then your display brightness wont work probably, the drivers im mentioning arent included in those distros either as they arent in the kernel, nobara has a custom kernel with patches included for different hardware that arent included, using a distro that has the newest kernel and maybe that firmware included might solve your problem + a desktop environment like kde plasma because they also have tools for brightness control so trying nobara would be your last option or bazzite also as they have some isos for some hardware that dont have the right drivers included in the kernel by default This can be a common theme with these gaming laptops as developers may not have that laptop to develop a driver then to upstream it in the kernel I would actually try bazzite also as they have an iso for asus laptops bazzite.gg/
@@linuxnextThank you so much for responding and trying to recommend me a solution 🤍 I will try nobara and bazzite I hope my problem get fixed . have a nice day
Watched the whole video. Pretty sick man, you gained a sub. I tried moving to Linux a few years ago, but it was pretty janky then ngl. Looks like it's improved a lot. Back then a lot of people recommended doing VFIO GPU passthrough and running games in a windows vm. Is that pretty unnecessary now? Also I like to play older titles, I'm a bit of a patientgamer, and I like to use AMD's Virtual Super Resolution to run them at 5120x2160 downsampled to my monitors actual resolution of 2560x1080. No jaggies and it looks damn clean. Do the linux gpu drivers support that yet?
Thank you Running games through a vm isnt rlly necessary anymore unless their is a game you rlly want to play and dont want to run the game just on windows in a daul boot. Fsr is supported and fsr3 will be supported pretty soon as it has been open sourced recently The super resolution you can do but it would be through gamescope which is a tool that lets you do tons of customization to your game either it be upscailing or downscailing, stretching the resolution github.com/ValveSoftware/gamescope Its also preinstalled in nobara
Hello, I have a Panasonic toughbook CF-19z mk8, model number CF-19ZA813DM laptop that I want to use linux on. My specs are Intel i5 3610me processor, Intel HD-4000 gpu with 1.6gb vram , Intel AHC269 sound, Samsung 850 pro 1tb sata ssd, 16gb of ram. What would you recommend for my setup and for watching movies, offline GPS and offline modding and gaming for Oblivion and Skyrim
I just have a 2gb ram Laptop with i3 second gen and windows 10 Home is laging too much on it I want to move onto linux, so tell me if my PC is good enough to handle the new Nobara kde 39
I second the recommendation above. Something like Linux Mint, namely its lighter FXCE variant, would be more fitting choice for such an old AND weak system. You could also try something like Linux Lite. But which ever distro you go with, you should definitely consider upgrading the RAM if at all possible. Even 8GB is starting to be too little.
@@linuxnext I tested all the protons, and the one that opens the game is Proton 8.5. My setup is a Xeon 2625v3, GTX 1660 Super, 16GB RAM, and a 240GB SSD with 500MB/s read/write speeds. The most I can achieve using Proton 8.5 is to open the game and get a black screen.
Hey dude, nice video. Now I will change my graphic card from Zotac 4080 AIM Extreme to a RX 7900 XTX White Edition Hellhound from PowerColor. I hope Nobara will work now better, or I will use Pop!OS, the time will show ;) It looks like the best way is using Linux with an AMD card, and of course with the Asus STRIX B550-A GAMING, amd CPU and card, it should much better with Linux.
@@linuxnext hello, thanks for ur tips, but I have deinstall the drivers and so on with DDU in Windows 11 and Linux, I installed a fresh installation of Nobara, i thought, nobara is fine, and maybe I got only problems with nobara, because i used an Nvidia card. It works great, but do u know how to install or check the best drivers for my RX 7900 XTX on nobara?
@@m1cs0w on amd you check the mesa version which for nobara it uses the git version for gaming and that means its the latest built version from master at the time glorious built it for you guys For the normal version of mesa you can check through steam, by clicking help, system information Or in your terminal you can do vulkaninfo --summary
@@linuxnext thanks, it looks like I got the latest version? mesa 24.2. But how to control the settings, for example i use a monitor with gsync or fressync, and in windows with amd adrenalin it works fine, but here a little bit not so smooth
@@m1cs0w yes mesa 24.2 is currently not out as its a git version so you have a very new version which is great 👍 in kde under wayland in display settings its called adaptive sync which is freesync, you can set it to always which isnt recommended as it will start changing the refresh rate constantly when watching videos, automatic is what you should use For configuring your gpu like fan speeds, clock speeds and power profiles you can use LACT, you just grab the .rpm for fedora/nobara github.com/ilya-zlobintsev/LACT I set my power profile in lact to highest performance so adaptive sync can work easier
Nobara is not bad, good for gaming, a lot pre-installed packages. But for me (also for gaming) is Solus (4.5) the better choice (not bloated, recent Kernel, latest Mesa, etc).
anyone knows of distros that come with WINE pre-installed out of the gate? I only know of Zorin OS that does that... bonus points if not using SystemD 🤣and extra bonus points if having full compatibility with Ryzen processors (and full APU functionality, power plans, etc)
Why would you need wine preinstalled exactly? If you use bottles, heroic, lutris they install wine for you and you would use either wine-ge or proton-ge which package other dependencies like translation layers to get games working I dont see why ryzen processors + apu wouldnt work under a rolling distro like endeavor, opensuse tumbleweed or nobara/fedora Same goes for power plans, as long as your above 6.7 it should work properly under something like corectrl or lact for changing power or overclocking, underclocking etc
lol, the only game I've played drunk was CoD Black Ops II Zombies. It all melded together. We apparently got to one of the rounds in the 20's or 30's but I literally thought we were on the same round the whole time. Nobara looks to be a solid OS. I'm probably going to give it a run. Been looking for a distro that I could use for gaming. Simplicity within the OS would allow me to push things as much as I can.
@@thebeyonder77777 I highly suggest you do not use ntfs on linux, there are ways of making it work but in general you should be using ext4 or btrfs for games running through proton or native
Don't quote me on this one, but I think Host Remote Play is to allow any game and app in your library to be Remote Play compatible, something like Parsec but for Linux... Something I've been wanting to do for a long time but didn't get it to work. It is possible but not sure if that's what it is.
I think a lot of gamers would like to see gaming related benchmarks of different distros with side-by-side comparisons. FPS, frame rate stability, load times, etc. I've yet to see anyone actually doing a performance comparison like that. If it already exists, I'd be grateful if someone could point me in the right direction.
I think its because every distro is the same for performance, they all use the same kernel and mesa drivers for amd, and then nvidia your using the same proprietary drivers across those distros so that also doesn't change performance that much. The only difference for nobara is that it uses mesa git which is just a bleeding edge build of mesa instead of using the stable point release like everyone else
@@linuxnext I was watching Linux Game Cast (the 'Linux Beats Windows 11 In Gaming' episode) here on RUclips and the were showing some benchmarks apparently done by a German site. They didn't link a source, so I can't check it myself, but apparently Nobara had better performance than for example Pop!_OS in some games. For example, Cyberpunk 2077 had an 89,6 fps average on Nobara, while for Pop!_OS it was 72,7. In other games, the performance disparity was much tighter. I don't really want to draw any conclusions solely based on that limited data, so I've been hoping to see some additional testing. I'm relatively new to Linux, so I don't really know how many performance-altering factors exists from distro to distro, so thanks for shedding some light on that. I imagine other new linux gamers might be curious about this as well.
@@PropaneWP yes, nobara also has some patches applied to the kernel from the zen kernel which is used on arch, this can improve the cpu side of gaming + with mesa git you get the most recent patches from developers. Overall I don't notice much difference as I'm usually just focusing on playing the game but i may create a video as i do have enough storage to install multiple distros
make sure your using x11, to use x11 logout to the login manager, bottom left, plasma(x11) wait for 560 driver to arrive this month then switch back to wayland when you have that driver installed
@@linuxnext im not a tech guy. I just despise the way windows and apple operate and swore id never use them on another device. So I've fot a new laptop and put Nobara on it and realized i jumped into the pool without knowing how to swim. So please forgive my inexperience. Idk what sudo dnf auto remove is. The laptop is a lenovo with "amd ryzen 5000 series 5" and "amd radeon graphics" advertised on it. Im not totally sure what that means. But hopefully you do 😅. Any help at all you could offers would be appreciated like water in a desert. Basically a bunch of apps and games will open when i click em, then like 2 seconds later they close. I updated the system, did everything it recommended and restarted it, but i still get the same problems. Even discord does this and i thought this distro came with it ready to go. Thank you in advance for taking the time to read this.
@@jaguarholly7156 sudo dnf autoremove checks for unneeded packages in your distro and will remove them for you. That's interesting that that happens when you have probs the best configuration for a laptop to run linux on. I would do the autoremove command in your terminal, restart and see if anything changes, if not i would suggest installing a distro like pop os as they have great support for laptops as they manufacture laptops with that hardware your using. Good luck!
@@linuxnext thanks heaps for taking the time to reply man. I'll try that. I also got some help on my disros discord and i got most stuff i want to use up and running. The Linux community it awesome and im glad to be a part of it now 😀
Wanna switch from win10 by the end of support date. Total newbie to linux. My use case is vid recording/twitchstreaming an some basic editing. I do alot of gaming and emulation. I also watch youtube netflix dinsey+ amazon prime and i like google chrome and firefox for net browsing. Not a big fan of telemetry. Acer nitro5 gaming laptop Nvid geforce gtx 1650 Amd ryzen 3550h cpu 20 gb am 256 gb ssd 1tb hdd Also i use my ps4 pad for my pc gaming and also use wiimotes for lightgun games. One extra thing is i like how batocera seems from the vids i saw but i heard its meant to be used offline as its notsecure
What games do you play? When it comes to recording/Livestreaming it will be the exact same as windows, especially with a update that is coming out with obs that will bring it on par with windows encoding. For basic recording there is a great app called gpu screen recorder that is equivalent to nvidias shadowplay flathub.org/apps/com.dec05eba.gpu_screen_recorder When it comes to google chrome all of that is supported, if you go the gpu screen recorder link you can look at that store and find the major browsers that are supported on Linux Emulation is awesome on linux, you get better performance because of the vulkan driver that is implemented in linux All of your services will work like netflix etc its the exact same as windows Also yes sony supports the ps4 and ps5 controller in the linux kernel so thats all goods also Im unsure about wii controllers, if i had to guess it is supported but not officially by Nintendo but maybe im wrong and it is supported officially in the kernel wiki.archlinux.org/title/Wiimote when windows 10 goes EOL it will be a perfect time to switch as everything will be ready for all types of users and hardware lol On nvidia right now we are in a weird place as nvidia is bringing out a new driver for features that linux users need to have a good experience and we are in a transition phase of moving to some new technology in the linux space like wayland so other things need to be supported in the time being. Its kinda weird because all of these awesome things are arriving in linux and windows 10 is going EOL at the perfect time when linux desktop should be ready lol
@@linuxnext omg thankyou that was very informative. Games like teeken7n8 streetfighter 5 n 6 dbfz dragon ball xenoverse 2 UMVC3. Ghost runner 1 an 2 the surge 2 killing floor nier yakuza series serioussam series hellpoint lego2kdrive koeitecmo warriors games.
teeken7n8 works streetfighter 5 n 6 works dbfz dragon ball works but multiplayer for dbfz isnt supported with proton xenoverse 2 works UMVC3. Works Ghost runner 1 an 2 works the surge 2 works killing floor works nier works yakuza series all works serioussam series all works hellpoint works lego2kdrive works koeitecmo warriors games all works If you want to look at these games with how they work with proton and what users use or other games you want to see if they work you can look at www.protondb.com Or for anticheat stuff you can see here areweanticheatyet.com/
Also another reason why GE said another reason why he when this route is because he lives much further away from his dad and he can't work on his machine as much has he did in the past so he wants his dad to have the best stable install as possible. Which also he mentions in his interview with Brodie Robertson. Also nice detailed video on Nobara.
@@linuxnext actually a lot of distros provide a torrent but im trying out mageia 9 right now but if it doesnt play steam well ill look intoendevour or linux mint lmde. rthanks for the reply. 👍
Nice video man, it inspired me to dual boot it to give it a try and it was good until it told me to restart for an update and now whenever I try and boot it I get something like a failed to start system services error and it just takes me to a console
yeah I tried it yesterday. It froze on me several times so I ditched it. Every time I wanted to change something it froze and I had to wait a minute before I could go on.
I would like to agree. Unfortunately, Nobara doesn't really run smoothly. The graphical updater hangs, Lutris takes forever to start and also crashes when trying to install Ubisoft Connect. I have an AMD 7600 and would therefore like to use a current distro. Ubuntu 23.10 complicates a lot of things with Snap, so I'll try openSuse or Fedora next.
For lutris use flatpak instead as i have had the same problems with it on system packaged version But im installing opensuse tumbleweed right now lol as i prefer it for the most part
@@linuxnextI love OpenSUSE but switched to Debian 12 Bookworm and am at least as happy with it. In fact, there's been a couple of things that just worked better and/or easier to get going. Both are great and underrated, IMHO.
I use Nobara on a RX 7800XT and it was rock solid from the beginning! No problem with Lutris, neither with Mesa (24.1 at the moment), wayland, VRR, Davinci Resolve...eveything working just fine here
Arch Garuda is great for gaming as long you know the basics the os basically tells you how to fix it and gives you tips I switch form parrot I like don’t have to spend more time fixing it than gaming like I had to on parrot
I tried Nobara but I find *Garuda Dragonized Gaming Edition* as the better option and useful for me. I have several old Windows games already istalled on my hardrive and I can run them flawlessly on GD live USB just using WINE that comes with it pre-installed. I don't even have to tweak anything. 🙂
@@linuxnext 7600 3060ti 32gb ram I ended up switching to Zorin, this one was giving me random issues, and kept hard freezing on me. Some restarts it would ask for my pass, others it wouldn't. Than I would get some black screens, idk the cause but I decided to try something else. I have some experience with Linux, used it for a few years on a old PC but never my main system.
@GainingDespair thats why i asked as nvidia has problems under wayland, wayland is used by default on nobara when you first install it, the password is probs the kwallet which tries to use encrypted passwords for your apps which you can disable in the kde settings, all that was needed for nobara was on the login page to select x11 plasma instead of plasma wayland and i think the majority of your problems would have been solved until nvidia steps up their game with wayland support Zorin should be fine as its up to 17 now so you have the majority of new packages installed and gaming wont be a problem under that as you use nvidia and zorin uses x11 im pretty sure
@@linuxnext I was looking into any updates on Linux support for D2 and I recognized that icon lol. Seen the reddit comment, but very true enough is enough.
I saw on another video, Nobora only has one developer; which makes it a hard pass for me. If the one person gets sick, hit by a car, has a heart attack, gets married or divorced, has a baby, etc… support is likely to stop. Seen it several times before. So, Mint, Fedora, or Arch would be better, imo.
i tried nobara 36 some time ago.. and it was great! now i have nobara 39 and it sucks:( freezes.. crashes.. black screens.. horrible gaming performance..
Ok, but can it run minecraft? Thats not even a joke, minecraft is horribly unoptimized to the point that with 4 different performance enhancing mods (designed to be used together) im still using 100% gpu and getting 80 fps while idle on the steam deck, which is my current setup because reasons
I mean yeah, you're using a steamdeck which is pretty low end hardware for a pc, minecraft with shaders and mods runs pretty alright under a rx 6700 10gb, not amazing but it works
I'm not on Nobara, but I just went on flathub, found prism launcher, installed that, logged into my microsoft account through the launcher, then ran a modpack - easy.
Us hardware 100% AMD for a better experience whit NOBARA. And find a way to optimize the fan speeds and optimize the cpu on linux. If not you will have an HOT system that may do problem to you hardware.
Going to Fedora -> Debian testing -> Opensuse -> Nobara. Why all this distrohoping in just one month. You went from Fedora to Nobara which is basically Fedora but bloated.
Arch is the ultimate gaming distro. 2nd would be debian. Forget about every other distro. Arch is great for bleading edge ! debian would be for ultimate stability. Forget about all other distros ! But honestly, I'd choose debian for its the only distro that's as stable as Windows 10. But Windows 10 sucks with its moto, forced apps, telemetry, and lack of customization. Fuck 11. My grandmother can break Arch, ubuntu, manjaro, pop os, elementary os... nothings as stable as debian ! Everything besides debian will break even by just updating ! Trust me I've been using linux for over 10 years. Also if you're new fuck everything besides steam, trust the system ! Steam is the only stable way of gaming on Linux, well for at least the hard-core gamers ! GG
I'm pretty sold the only thing I will miss is Destiny 2 ... it's really the only game I play ... and I have nearly 3k hours but they refuse to support Linux. I am tired of windows crap like really tired of it.
Yeah, its a huge rip they dont care about linux, they even have a native port they maintained for google stadia but whatever. You can go to the reddit feedback post that was made a while back to put your thoughts on the matter www.reddit.com/r/DestinyTheGame/s/c7Lgq03iaC Idk why they continue to ignore bringing support and even then its not rlly support as valve will take care of the game with proton. All they have to do is enable the anticheat to not flag us as a cheater
@@linuxnext The game works on Linux, it worked before they moved to battle eye, and I believe it was playable on Linux under their in house anti-cheat but folks would occasionally get banned. The game is fully compatible however even the anti-cheat natively supports Linux, they just refuse to enable it stating only a fraction of players will use Linux, yet Linux players account for over 90% of error codes/support tickets in games that offer support.
Hate to say it but honestly ANY other distro is far better for gaming for my setup. Nobara installs on my setup but after doing updates, it boots only to a black screen. I have reproduced this multiple times. I thought it was just my PC, so I had two different friends try it on their machines. They also get black screens after updating Nobara, therefore I couldn’t fathom recommending this distro to anyone with a straight face. Sure, it installs just fine initially, but the moment you do the first reboot after doing the initial updates .. bye bye, Nobara.
And then i have the opposite result of running nobara for over a year with nvidia, updating it regularly, running my servers and software just fine with some issues but i can fix them easily as i researched what to do in certain situations. Im not running it on my main anymore as i prefer opensuse tumbleweed as i dont want to use fedora/fedora based distros anymore but iv had problems with nobara + nvidia in the past like updating and the nvidia drivers decide to not work anymore and have to reinstall them. Linux can be weird sometimes with such things like nvidia, i would say tho arch based distros and distros like debian, linux mint or pop os etc handle nvidia better in most cases
@@linuxnext yeah that is so odd. I wish I knew what was causing this for myself and my two friends. One buddy tried this on a desktop and got the black screen issue after updating. For me I try to put Linux distros on a laptop that I take with me on the road as a truck driver (HP Omen gaming laptop that I hate the heck out of and want to replace anyway). Due to having an Nvidia card in the machine I had to use Nobara-39-KDE-Nvidia-2023-12-30.iso - I wonder if it is just that specific version? I might have to have a go at another version later this week.
@@Faelandaea yeah its possible, you can grab the regular iso and install the drivers after installing, its called like nvidia driver installer or something. Nobara/linux will use nouveau drivers which works fine for very minimal use until you install the proprietary drivers Good luck!
just say gnome like a normal person. nice distro, sure, ultimate for gamers, probably, but beginers stay away.. this is the experience of someone who has some experience with linux but trying to go nubara from win bcos gaming(no exotic hardware, 5700x, 6600xt). begginers approach is to listen to instructions so lets go. use etcher to make usb, usb doesnt work, try again and nothing bcos etcher is huge pos. so i try dd, also usb fails. so back to windows and rufus doesnt disapoint. boots but unknown issue, googling says disable secure boot. after bios, install finishes but for some reason every boot is halted and sometimes takes 4 minutes and sometimes doesnt boot at all. i wont look at logs, begginers dont even know theres logs. but f it, lets try stuff. you look how to install stuff on linux but nobara is not your average linux, its redhat and most tutorials and commands wont work here.. delete and go back to win or mint or whatever. IF a gamer installs nobara and it works fine and installs steam and doesnt need anything else it will be great i guess. didnt work for me.
Ok well, the gnome you're thinking of is the statue you find in a garden, the gnome I'm pronouncing is a desktop environment, 2 different things. The devs of gnome even say it is pronounced the way i pronounced it in the video. ruclips.net/video/biEbStkdn4k/видео.htmlsi=DbXm-17vN3etgy20 If you're having issues with rufus and etcher then it seems your usb stick might be the problem, iv installed nobara on 3 different computers ranging from a rx 6700 to a rtx 2060, to even my 2015 intel laptop and they all installed nobara perfectly fine. Make sure secure boot is off for nobara as this is required Reformat your usb stick or grab a new one If all else fails then try a different distro or stay on windows Also redhat is one of the big leaders in the linux space and is very easy to find commands as nobara is based on fedora so there is plenty of documentation on fedoras website
Lol I was under the impression you knew what you were talking about, until you started playing Halo Infinite.. that game sucks. The OG halos are the only good halos
I show halo infinite because of the development work it has had under proton and amd not because its a better game, of course the older halos are better
Finally an actual review of Nobara 39.. sick of seeing people "reviewing" it by putting it on a live usb and commenting on the looks. Great vid!
Agreed, A lot of channels review distros that way and it's frustrating.
Been waiting for Nobara 39 to hit. Glad they've moved their distro to a modified KDE desktop now too.
Great video! I'll have a look at the changelog. I switched from windows to Nobara 2 weeks ago and was a bit lost on how to run the games (which version of proton, differences between wine and proton, shader cache issues.... ), and I've learned a lot thanks to your videos, which I really appreciate.
So thank you and happy new year from France 😊
In two weeks you should have learned how to run your games, you should've needed Nobara. I've noticed that most of you guys that switched don't want to learn how to use Linux you just want a Linux version of Windows.
@@Error8x8 I want to switch to a comparable OS that works and it's a problem? Cry about it
@@PPeeDaster If your technical skills are as bad as your writing, you're fucked on whatever OS you use
The "Host Remote Play" shortcut restarts Steam with the pipewire flag, so that the video/audio can be streamed properly through pipewire to another client since Wayland has security settings to prevent spying.
It isn't required if you log into the system using X11 and it is not perfect, as some games don't output properly anyways.
I see, thank you
Hey you may already know this but a quick hint, with all these different distros you’re testing out. If you have a large flash drive or sd card like 64gb use something like ventoy to be able to store multiple ISO’s to one drive rather than flashing it for each distro. You’ll be able to choose which one you want to boot into by booting to the flash drive/sd card. It’s a great way to flip between them and you can always just drag and drop more iso to the drive once you flashed ventoy onto it at anytime. Great work on this channel. I’ve watched like 20 videos in the last 2 days
Dude the wallpaper is godly :)
Like me.
I would have to agree, Nobara is top notch out of the box for gaming and content creation. It is one of the most responsive and functional desktops I have ever used. I am used to the old official release with customized gnome and that was my shindig. There are plenty of Distros that work out of the box but Nobara is cool and made by someone who really understands proton. This man made playing Re2 remake amongst other RE engine games possible way before proton officially supported it. The only other Distros I have used that come close to Nobara is Garuda Gnome. Fedora has come so far recently and fedora based distros are awesome. Cutting edge is paving the way! I am about to give Nobara 39 a shot and plan on installing and playing some Re4 Remake. Thankfully I have an all AMD machine so my Linux experience is mostly headache free. Awesome video my friend!
Thanks for the in-depth showcase, I think I'm going to try Nobara instead of switching to windows 11.
I have been a Microsoft user from the first 286 cpu. But I have switched over to Nobara part time. I have the the new 39 and it has been grate. I'm getting around in it almost as well as Windows.
great video with deep insights about Nobara 39 - looking forward to more masterpieces, haha :)
plus happy new year from Austria
Nice video! I've just switched a PC to Nobara 39 as a dedicated gaming PC. Working nicely!
Happy new year! I hava a question, I'm looking if nobura is optimized for OBS/streaming?
Happy new year aswell
Yes obs works well on nobara, if you use the obs version that is provided under nobara it will work great, or you can go the flatpak route aswell which also works well
I dropped windows back in September for Nobara 38 KDE Plasma and it has been great so far. I'm wondering if it is worth upgrading to Nobara 39 at this time.
eh its not that much of difference ngl
should be fine till next release 6 months later
thats awesome tho :) glad your having a good time
Eventually you'll know when the one you are using is EOL. Every release is supported for 9 months.
I just did it and it's not worth it IMO. No difference.
Everything is working pretty well right now so I will hold off for a bit. Thanks for the heads up @@OthoDaFe
I'm on Nobara right now and what can i say. Every time when I boot Nobara something can going wrong. Sometimes it just stuck and you have to hard reset. Sometimes everything(even the mouse move) lags after booting. But sometimes it works fine. I didn't find a pattern why it happening, just rebooting my system until it will work.
I will give a chance for 1-2 weeks and then probably will switch back to Debian.
whats your hardware?
@@linuxnext Z690-A, 12600k, Gigabyte RTX 3060, 64GB
Ypu know how long i have been looking for a good video on this Linux for gaming. Nice video brother much appreciated 💯💯
Thank you for your videos. Since i'm a newbie compare to others, I've learn a lot from you about Linux Gaming. Nobara is great, one of favorite distros. I don't know why, my pc doens't like KDE very much and since I have to use it for work, i've changed back to OpenSuse Tumbleweed Gnome. But it's just what works for me right now, Nobara is a great distro :)
Ublue and Fedora Silverblue is really great if you don't want to mess with nvidia drivers and also Asus kernels are included for gaming laptops and i must say its on par with PopOs in battery life. Also supergfxctl is included when selecting integrated or hybrid graphics.
Tried today. Had issues installing Nvidia drivers. Software updater was acting weird as well as it constantly showed updates were available although there weren't.
I would advise just using Bazzite at this point
I also had the update bug, I read somewhere you have to delete one of the mesa packages and then try again? That seemed to fix the issue with the pending updates and everything installed fine
I've always ran into one issue or another (or so much to pull your hair out over the years) trying run games with a Linux distro on a hybrid laptop. Pop has been close to flawless for me the past couple of years. But wanting to try KDE (that works), being a huge fan of GE and watching your review, I'm stoked to give Nobara a try. Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts with the community!
Sadly i cannot get it to run in dualboot with Windows. Tried different layouts with grub2, but it refuses to boot.
Do you have secure boot on?
@@linuxnext Hmm maybe. No problems with openSuse, Ubuntu. I stick with ubuntu for now. That works with the nvidia drivers, Windows, Steam. But nobara looks interessting. I can install nobara but after a sucessfull installation i only get a grub2 command prompt. Maybe its because of my SSD, and HDD layout with several partitions...
@@aster934 could 100% be, i dont have multiple partitions made so i have never had problems with nobara but secure boot is not allowed with nobara as its kernel has custom patches applied that dont work well with secureboot
Have you tried the auto tiling in kde? i use it in gnome via the pop extension. I really should not be lazy and try it myself though.
yeah, it works great. super + t brings up the customization, then holding shift will snap them into place
Thanks for the video, i was searching for Linux gaming because i want to be windows free and i finally made my decision, going to try this one out!
Nice, whats your hardware?
@@linuxnext i have a RTX 3070 with Ryzen 5 5600.
@@K1NGSSTH seems pretty good, nobara will use wayland by default and nvidia sometimes can be a little iffy on wayland so if you have issues try x11 by loggin out and switching it on the bottom left when your on the login screen.
Good luck!
@@linuxnext Thanks for the tips! Will try for a few days, if i get some problems that i can't solve then i might try a different distro.
would you recommend installing nobara on a intel nuc x15 laptop with 12700h and arc 730m gpu?
yeah i dont see why not, arc gpus tho arent rlly good enough for everything yet on linux as intel is changing a lot of their drivers in the kernel for intel hardware and they are working on anv improvements in mesa which is their vulkan driver that is used for gaming, right now you have to use their older i915 kernel driver and vulkan extensions that dont exist so you cant play dx12/vkd3d games yet, only some. besides that you should have a good time, the i915 drivers + anv are good enough for everything except playing dx12 games. nobara likes to use newer packages so you should have the best experience that you can get for your hardware on linux
@@linuxnext appreciate the through response
I have an XFX Speedster Merc 319 6900 XT gpu and Intel I9-9900K with 64gb ram and I want to switch from Windows 11 to Linux permanently. My issue is I have tried Arch and it didn't install correctly twice so I ditched it. I then tried Kbuntu and had issues with it as well after restarting my pc. What I see is more people are using Linux Mint for gaming as well.
My big question is which Distro do I go with that's easy for new beginners like me and my main thing I do on my pc is, play video games from GOG and Steam and some Epic Launcher. Then the normal stuff browse RUclips for music videos and watching my favorite videos. I'm a home user no work related stuff just mostly for entertainment banking online and stuff like that.
Also I have an Xbox Core Elite 2 Controller and It must work with Linux and my Steelseries Nova 7 headset also needs to work with Linux. Any help is greatly appreciated thanks guys and LinuxNext 😊👍
bazzite
bazzite.gg/
great review. now i know why nobara is being popular in linux gaming scene
🙂 Hi friend, do you have any idea why the mouse pointer hangs up intermitentaly, i can make it hang by simply moving the steam icon on the desktop, and i've seen the same problem on two other of my desktops, something really weird about this distro, i tried Peppermint OS and its doesnt hang the mouse pointer, so its definitely something with this distro, i'm surprised no one else has noticed it?
Its because it doesnt happen lol, whats your hardware?
on both my msi z690 i7 12700 working fine in windows 11 and Peppermint OS but intermittent freezes in nobara, on my gigabyte z690 i7 12700 is seems to be running nobara just fine, maybe has something to do with the type of motherboard? but yeah its strange ive been googling around and nobody really mentions the intermittent freezing problems, it seems to be a hit and miss distro for the moment, I just tried Regata and so far has no intermittent freezing on the msi board 🙂 @@linuxnext
are you using nvidia? if so switch to x11
yes invidia, ok I will test that out, thanks for the tip 🙂@@linuxnext
Thanks mate - very useful overview. Cheers.
Nobara is the most “it just works” distro I’ve ever used and will be my daily driver fir the foreseeable future
Have you compared and used Garuda?
I have used Garuda and i think it can be a great arch based distro for gaming but for me the theme that is applied is too flashy lol. i feel like im in a candy shop 😂
I'd be interested to see you do a video comparing nobara and bazzite os.
Hmm seems like a interesting distro similar to nobara for gamers, so i will 100% have a look
It is a very nice distro if you like the SteamOS experience. Something to keep in mind, when booted in Game mode on Bazzite, you can get system updates through Steam interface. It does take a while to apply the updates and it will not be able to tell you what has changed, as that update system change log is controlled via Steam and cannot be changed by the Bazzite team.
Thanks for nice review. Another nice distro for gaming is Garuda OS. Both make configs and for gaming much easier.
My Acer Nitro 5 didn't want to switch to dGPU, stays on Hybrid. Can't change from Wayland to x11, or back. Maybe I'm doing something wrong.
Never heard of this one before, & considering it's primed for Nvidia it probably wouldn't be much use to me now- would have a few years back before I swapped everything over to AMD. I've been using Garuda dr460nized (the KDE "gaming" ver) for about a year now, & it includes even more than this distro & auto installs missing dependencies etc; as well. Can't say whether it's better or not as I've never tried Nobara, but it seemed easier to pickup. I also set up a system for my niece, (6yo) using ChimeraOS, on an older McDonalds Slimline "KVS Station" PC (AMD on/die GPU) so she could run her steam & GOG games I got her, like Autonauts. That was so simple, she can do just about whatever she needs w/o me having to show her now. She's starting to learn how to get around & update things in the Terminal. Last time I visited she asked me: "Why does linux go so fast but windows is all poopy?" I could help but crack up.
Lmao i love this comment, good to see the younglings learning linux
Thanx for the vid regardless, & sometimes the truth that comes out of their mouth's needs to be heard lol.@@linuxnext
The startup gui helper has some info about Davinci resolve addons and Blender HIP addons. But AMD has only released HIP support for 7900 GPU's. This is fine, you can disable HIP render in Blender. But if OpenCL support is installed then some apps just run into error on AMD hardware. AMD dropped OpenCL support many years ago, they supply ROCm software on very few devices on temporary basis. If you look Geekbench ML (cross-platform AI benchmark that uses real-world machine learning tasks) test results, then AMD 2023 laptop Zen 4 CPU's are 90 times slower than ipad iphone. Preinstalling a lot of addons on unsupported hardware will make apps run slower than on native c++ mode.
nice and indepth coverage of nobara 39
Can garuda OS be used instead of nobara?
If you like garuda use garuda, its all personal in the end ngl
I use Garuda and am happy with it. I wanted badly to try Nobara but it simply doesn’t work after doing updates. Garuda has been stable so far, is easy to use, and has everything you could possibly need for gaming preinstalled. I keep hearing people say stuff like “Arch is hard”, but I’m a complete newbie to Linux and find Garuda easier to use than any other distro I’ve tried (except Mint. Mint is also easy for me at least). Like he said, though, use whatever works best for you. I’m only putting my experience so as to contribute to the feedback.
@@Faelandaea after updates as?Also I hear bad things about arch based distros like manjaro and garuda being "too bloated" and holding back true arch experience.
I would "suggest" xero linux or for terminal experience use endeavor os for an arch based distro
xerolinux.xyz/
endeavouros.com/
@@linuxnext I installed Garuda OS and when I launch steam runtime,steam native is launched as guessing from name in staus bar of fhe steam window.Is it a problem?
Quite unrelated question! Which Plasma theme do you use?
Just breeze lol or what nobara is using at the moment
hey, i wanna install this on an external hard drive and only boot up from it when i have the drive plugged in. what steps should i do different to make it so i can boot into my windows os which is my main os (for the time being) when the drive isnt plugged in and then when i plug the external drive with nobara installed i can switch to that?
Well when you install nobara on that external drive you would need to put your efi boot partition on your main drive so that when you want to boot into nobara your grub isnt missing
@linuxbenchmarks I managed to figure it out actually, now I'm currently setting up a windows vm for gpu passthrough
I can't get usb gamepad to work with Xbox cloud on browser. Had to install Windoze on a separate partition just for the PC Pass.
Have you ever come across this problem?
Same problem with GeForce Now on web browser as well.
No because i dont use cloud services
Hi I apologize if you answered this in the video already, but does this support HDR and VRR?
Vrr yes in kde wayland, hdr no BUT will be available next month with plasma 6 :)
And I have tested hdr on my monitor (hdri) under plasma 6 and it works wonderfully
Does a wired xbox360 controller work if you just plug it in or are there a bunch of hoops to jump through for that to work?
Works out of the gate. Xbox 360 should use xinput and that works as i have a 8bitdo sn30 pro plus and it shows up as a 360 controller on steam and emulation software
That is such a relief, I remember a few years ago getting a controller to work took several hours. Thanks for the reply.@@linuxnext
Heh, I tried Nobara. Interesting project. I might revisit it someday but im way too happy with EndeavourOS at the moment.
How do I change and tweak destop color settings under Nobara? In windows its nvidia control panel...
If you switch to x11 you can change it in your kde settings in color and Nvidia should have a color setting in their control panel on x11
Their is also a application that i remember called vibrant linux so if you search for it in discover you can probs find it, rlly good simple app for enhancing color saturation
flathub.org/apps/io.github.libvibrant.vibrantLinux
Thank you very much! @@linuxnext
How well does it work with Laptops that have hybrid AMD Integrated with Nvidia RTX dedicated? Just bought myself a new SSD and I'm thinking about giving Linux another shot.
It will automatically detect when to use a dedicated gpu.
im pretty sure the rest of the operating system runs off the integrated and then when you play games it will use your dedicated gpu, dont count me on that tho as iv mever used a hybrid laptop before
Im also pretty sure it has a package to allow you to change it to full dedicated gpu or hybrid mode in the taskbar of kde plasma
@@linuxnext This is nice, I actually would like to have both options, as sometimes you can squeeze more performance when going full dedicated gpu (at least on windows). Thank you.
I had issues with Fedora 40 not recognizing my laptop's GPU, Windows 11 also gave me this issue when I upgraded but you have slightly more robust options in how to fix it. Nobara works great with my laptop though and immediately recognized it and also installed the Asus drivers for other features
I looked at Nobara a while ago in both a virtual machine an older laptop. I prefer the KDE version, but it is an excellent OS. At the moment, I'm using Garuda on my newer laptop.
I'd like to try it but when I first booted it, found i needed to use the no graphic option for installer, now i still can't boot into it without a black screen, assuming it doesn't like my 3080. But i can't find out how to boot with no graphic drivers to try and get the propriatary driver's
If you choose the nobara nvidia iso then they are preinstalled, When you get to black screen do ctrl, alt f3
Then after login do
sudo dnf update nobara-repos --refresh
sudo dnf4 config-manager --set-enabled nobara-nvidia-new-feature-39
sudo dnf update --refresh
akmods
After your done restart
If that doesnt work with the new drivers, downgrade to 535 by doing
sudo dnf4 config-manager --set-disabled nobara-nvidia-new-feature-39
sudo dnf remove kmod-nvidia*
sudo dnf distro-sync --refresh
akmods
I have a PC with Gigabyte RTX 2080 ... Does Nobara have support for nVidia video cards ?
Yes they also have a iso with the drivers preinstalled
For some reason after booting it from the usb and trying to install I don't have the wi-fi available but on the normal Fedora I do...
I tried installing every linux distro and my brightness control wont work I can feel my screen is dim on every distro plus I tried every distro possible except nobara I have asus tuff a17 laptop with nvidea rtx 3050 ti and amd ryzen 7 5800h integrated gpu I tried every fix on the internet but my problem not solved :/
So you have or havent tried nobara? And what about desktop environments on what distros
There is a asus driver patch on nobara so definitely give it a try with kde plasma
There is also a gui for this after installing the drivers which are preinstalled on nobara called
rog-control-center
@@linuxnext I haven't tried nobara yet I'm confused if its a hardware or distro issue since I tried alot of linux distros I just want to leave windows but this issue is just not letting me
@@mellowww2222 well if your using any LTS linux distro then your display brightness wont work probably, the drivers im mentioning arent included in those distros either as they arent in the kernel, nobara has a custom kernel with patches included for different hardware that arent included, using a distro that has the newest kernel and maybe that firmware included might solve your problem + a desktop environment like kde plasma because they also have tools for brightness control so trying nobara would be your last option or bazzite also as they have some isos for some hardware that dont have the right drivers included in the kernel by default
This can be a common theme with these gaming laptops as developers may not have that laptop to develop a driver then to upstream it in the kernel
I would actually try bazzite also as they have an iso for asus laptops
bazzite.gg/
@itsL0F1 also how do you normally change your brightness on windows? Or is it already high enough?
@@linuxnextThank you so much for responding and trying to recommend me a solution 🤍 I will try nobara and bazzite I hope my problem get fixed . have a nice day
Watched the whole video. Pretty sick man, you gained a sub. I tried moving to Linux a few years ago, but it was pretty janky then ngl. Looks like it's improved a lot. Back then a lot of people recommended doing VFIO GPU passthrough and running games in a windows vm. Is that pretty unnecessary now? Also I like to play older titles, I'm a bit of a patientgamer, and I like to use AMD's Virtual Super Resolution to run them at 5120x2160 downsampled to my monitors actual resolution of 2560x1080. No jaggies and it looks damn clean. Do the linux gpu drivers support that yet?
Thank you
Running games through a vm isnt rlly necessary anymore unless their is a game you rlly want to play and dont want to run the game just on windows in a daul boot.
Fsr is supported and fsr3 will be supported pretty soon as it has been open sourced recently
The super resolution you can do but it would be through gamescope which is a tool that lets you do tons of customization to your game either it be upscailing or downscailing, stretching the resolution
github.com/ValveSoftware/gamescope
Its also preinstalled in nobara
Hello, I have a Panasonic toughbook CF-19z mk8, model number CF-19ZA813DM laptop that I want to use linux on. My specs are Intel i5 3610me processor, Intel HD-4000 gpu with 1.6gb vram , Intel AHC269 sound, Samsung 850 pro 1tb sata ssd, 16gb of ram. What would you recommend for my setup and for watching movies, offline GPS and offline modding and gaming for Oblivion and Skyrim
Maybe debian with xfce or linux mint
I just have a 2gb ram Laptop with i3 second gen and windows 10 Home is laging too much on it
I want to move onto linux, so tell me if my PC is good enough to handle the new Nobara kde 39
I recommend you install something like linux mint
I second the recommendation above.
Something like Linux Mint, namely its lighter FXCE variant, would be more fitting choice for such an old AND weak system.
You could also try something like Linux Lite. But which ever distro you go with, you should definitely consider upgrading the RAM if at all possible. Even 8GB is starting to be too little.
Could you please do a turotrial to configure cs2? on fedora 39. I can't play it. just black screen
Are you forcing proton on it? Native should work on most hardware, whats your gpu?
@@linuxnext I tested all the protons, and the one that opens the game is Proton 8.5. My setup is a Xeon 2625v3, GTX 1660 Super, 16GB RAM, and a 240GB SSD with 500MB/s read/write speeds. The most I can achieve using Proton 8.5 is to open the game and get a black screen.
@@kemedytere ok, cs2 doesnt support proton, please use native
ok@@linuxnext
I put it native, cs2 doesn't open
Hey dude, nice video. Now I will change my graphic card from Zotac 4080 AIM Extreme to a RX 7900 XTX White Edition Hellhound from PowerColor. I hope Nobara will work now better, or I will use Pop!OS, the time will show ;)
It looks like the best way is using Linux with an AMD card, and of course with the Asus STRIX B550-A GAMING, amd CPU and card, it should much better with Linux.
It should just remember to remove the nvidia packages before hand so you dont have conflicts with mesa(the user space drivers)
@@linuxnext hello, thanks for ur tips, but I have deinstall the drivers and so on with DDU in Windows 11 and Linux, I installed a fresh installation of Nobara, i thought, nobara is fine, and maybe I got only problems with nobara, because i used an Nvidia card. It works great, but do u know how to install or check the best drivers for my RX 7900 XTX on nobara?
@@m1cs0w on amd you check the mesa version which for nobara it uses the git version for gaming and that means its the latest built version from master at the time glorious built it for you guys
For the normal version of mesa you can check through steam, by clicking help, system information
Or in your terminal you can do
vulkaninfo --summary
@@linuxnext thanks, it looks like I got the latest version? mesa 24.2. But how to control the settings, for example i use a monitor with gsync or fressync, and in windows with amd adrenalin it works fine, but here a little bit not so smooth
@@m1cs0w yes mesa 24.2 is currently not out as its a git version so you have a very new version which is great 👍
in kde under wayland in display settings its called adaptive sync which is freesync, you can set it to always which isnt recommended as it will start changing the refresh rate constantly when watching videos, automatic is what you should use
For configuring your gpu like fan speeds, clock speeds and power profiles you can use LACT, you just grab the .rpm for fedora/nobara
github.com/ilya-zlobintsev/LACT
I set my power profile in lact to highest performance so adaptive sync can work easier
Thanks for giving Justice for Novara its actually been really good for both Beginners and Gamers
Nobara is not bad, good for gaming, a lot pre-installed packages. But for me (also for gaming) is Solus (4.5) the better choice (not bloated, recent Kernel, latest Mesa, etc).
Solus is good but as far as multi monitor support gpu and integrated graphics not so good.
@Harb000 im guessing this is using budgie desktop? Or is this under kde plasma? What hardware aswell?
gtx 1600 super it's on kde to solus is the only distro that i have tried so far that doesn't work when i plug my second monitor hdmi to my pc.
1660 sorry.
Hmm i see, thanks for the information!
anyone knows of distros that come with WINE pre-installed out of the gate? I only know of Zorin OS that does that... bonus points if not using SystemD 🤣and extra bonus points if having full compatibility with Ryzen processors (and full APU functionality, power plans, etc)
Why would you need wine preinstalled exactly? If you use bottles, heroic, lutris they install wine for you and you would use either wine-ge or proton-ge which package other dependencies like translation layers to get games working
I dont see why ryzen processors + apu wouldnt work under a rolling distro like endeavor, opensuse tumbleweed or nobara/fedora
Same goes for power plans, as long as your above 6.7 it should work properly under something like corectrl or lact for changing power or overclocking, underclocking etc
lol, the only game I've played drunk was CoD Black Ops II Zombies. It all melded together. We apparently got to one of the rounds in the 20's or 30's but I literally thought we were on the same round the whole time.
Nobara looks to be a solid OS. I'm probably going to give it a run. Been looking for a distro that I could use for gaming. Simplicity within the OS would allow me to push things as much as I can.
I installed nobara 39 alongside windows 11 and downloaded dying light 2 but nothing happens after launching do I need to configure wine?
Nope, just use proton or wine-ge and thats it
Whats your hardware?
And what is dying light 2 on?
@@linuxnexti was launching games on ntfs disk there were some issues so symlink solved the issue
@@thebeyonder77777 I highly suggest you do not use ntfs on linux, there are ways of making it work but in general you should be using ext4 or btrfs for games running through proton or native
Don't quote me on this one, but I think Host Remote Play is to allow any game and app in your library to be Remote Play compatible, something like Parsec but for Linux... Something I've been wanting to do for a long time but didn't get it to work. It is possible but not sure if that's what it is.
I think a lot of gamers would like to see gaming related benchmarks of different distros with side-by-side comparisons. FPS, frame rate stability, load times, etc. I've yet to see anyone actually doing a performance comparison like that. If it already exists, I'd be grateful if someone could point me in the right direction.
I think its because every distro is the same for performance, they all use the same kernel and mesa drivers for amd, and then nvidia your using the same proprietary drivers across those distros so that also doesn't change performance that much.
The only difference for nobara is that it uses mesa git which is just a bleeding edge build of mesa instead of using the stable point release like everyone else
@@linuxnext I was watching Linux Game Cast (the 'Linux Beats Windows 11 In Gaming' episode) here on RUclips and the were showing some benchmarks apparently done by a German site. They didn't link a source, so I can't check it myself, but apparently Nobara had better performance than for example Pop!_OS in some games. For example, Cyberpunk 2077 had an 89,6 fps average on Nobara, while for Pop!_OS it was 72,7. In other games, the performance disparity was much tighter.
I don't really want to draw any conclusions solely based on that limited data, so I've been hoping to see some additional testing.
I'm relatively new to Linux, so I don't really know how many performance-altering factors exists from distro to distro, so thanks for shedding some light on that. I imagine other new linux gamers might be curious about this as well.
@@PropaneWP yes, nobara also has some patches applied to the kernel from the zen kernel which is used on arch, this can improve the cpu side of gaming + with mesa git you get the most recent patches from developers. Overall I don't notice much difference as I'm usually just focusing on playing the game but i may create a video as i do have enough storage to install multiple distros
Working flawlessly on my Ryzen 9 7900 + RX 7800 XT
Can you put your wallpaper link and make tutorial for customize fedora kde ❤
x.com/artpaji/status/1735726513264492565?s=20 i then use upscaler to upscale them
Great video for both enthusiasts and newcomers (I'm in the middle xD) ^^
With all due respect: it's pronounced Nóbárá xD
🤓
Having nvidia black screen issues
make sure your using x11, to use x11 logout to the login manager, bottom left, plasma(x11)
wait for 560 driver to arrive this month then switch back to wayland when you have that driver installed
I just installed Nobara and nothing works 😢. Discord amd all my games open, but then close immediately. Its awful
Do some updates, do sudo dnf autoremove, What hardware specifically?
@@linuxnext im not a tech guy. I just despise the way windows and apple operate and swore id never use them on another device. So I've fot a new laptop and put Nobara on it and realized i jumped into the pool without knowing how to swim. So please forgive my inexperience. Idk what sudo dnf auto remove is. The laptop is a lenovo with "amd ryzen 5000 series 5" and "amd radeon graphics" advertised on it. Im not totally sure what that means. But hopefully you do 😅. Any help at all you could offers would be appreciated like water in a desert. Basically a bunch of apps and games will open when i click em, then like 2 seconds later they close. I updated the system, did everything it recommended and restarted it, but i still get the same problems. Even discord does this and i thought this distro came with it ready to go. Thank you in advance for taking the time to read this.
@@jaguarholly7156 sudo dnf autoremove checks for unneeded packages in your distro and will remove them for you. That's interesting that that happens when you have probs the best configuration for a laptop to run linux on.
I would do the autoremove command in your terminal, restart and see if anything changes, if not i would suggest installing a distro like pop os as they have great support for laptops as they manufacture laptops with that hardware your using.
Good luck!
@@linuxnext thanks heaps for taking the time to reply man. I'll try that. I also got some help on my disros discord and i got most stuff i want to use up and running. The Linux community it awesome and im glad to be a part of it now 😀
I really liked the wallpaper can someone link it?
twitter.com/artpaji/status/1747617814608011658?t=JKVN22u68vVJlJ9D1taxQA&s=19
Nice Potential Man wallpaper on a Nobara vid
Wanna switch from win10 by the end of support date. Total newbie to linux.
My use case is vid recording/twitchstreaming an some basic editing. I do alot of gaming and emulation. I also watch youtube netflix dinsey+ amazon prime and i like google chrome and firefox for net browsing. Not a big fan of telemetry.
Acer nitro5 gaming laptop
Nvid geforce gtx 1650
Amd ryzen 3550h cpu
20 gb am
256 gb ssd
1tb hdd
Also i use my ps4 pad for my pc gaming and also use wiimotes for lightgun games.
One extra thing is i like how batocera seems from the vids i saw but i heard its meant to be used offline as its notsecure
What games do you play? When it comes to recording/Livestreaming it will be the exact same as windows, especially with a update that is coming out with obs that will bring it on par with windows encoding. For basic recording there is a great app called gpu screen recorder that is equivalent to nvidias shadowplay
flathub.org/apps/com.dec05eba.gpu_screen_recorder
When it comes to google chrome all of that is supported, if you go the gpu screen recorder link you can look at that store and find the major browsers that are supported on Linux
Emulation is awesome on linux, you get better performance because of the vulkan driver that is implemented in linux
All of your services will work like netflix etc its the exact same as windows
Also yes sony supports the ps4 and ps5 controller in the linux kernel so thats all goods also
Im unsure about wii controllers, if i had to guess it is supported but not officially by Nintendo but maybe im wrong and it is supported officially in the kernel
wiki.archlinux.org/title/Wiimote
when windows 10 goes EOL it will be a perfect time to switch as everything will be ready for all types of users and hardware lol
On nvidia right now we are in a weird place as nvidia is bringing out a new driver for features that linux users need to have a good experience and we are in a transition phase of moving to some new technology in the linux space like wayland so other things need to be supported in the time being.
Its kinda weird because all of these awesome things are arriving in linux and windows 10 is going EOL at the perfect time when linux desktop should be ready lol
@@linuxnext omg thankyou that was very informative.
Games like teeken7n8 streetfighter 5 n 6 dbfz dragon ball xenoverse 2 UMVC3. Ghost runner 1 an 2 the surge 2 killing floor nier yakuza series serioussam series hellpoint lego2kdrive koeitecmo warriors games.
teeken7n8 works
streetfighter 5 n 6 works
dbfz dragon ball works but multiplayer for dbfz isnt supported with proton
xenoverse 2 works
UMVC3. Works
Ghost runner 1 an 2 works
the surge 2 works
killing floor works
nier works
yakuza series all works
serioussam series all works
hellpoint works
lego2kdrive works
koeitecmo warriors games all works
If you want to look at these games with how they work with proton and what users use or other games you want to see if they work you can look at
www.protondb.com
Or for anticheat stuff you can see here
areweanticheatyet.com/
@@linuxnext thankyou for the help info and guidance
Also another reason why GE said another reason why he when this route is because he lives much further away from his dad and he can't work on his machine as much has he did in the past so he wants his dad to have the best stable install as possible. Which also he mentions in his interview with Brodie Robertson. Also nice detailed video on Nobara.
Yah, without his dad i dont think nobara would have became a thing
thats great but they dont have a torrent so i cant install it. so whats the next best distro that has a torrent ?
Endeavour os i guess, not many other distros provide that
@@linuxnext actually a lot of distros provide a torrent but im trying out mageia 9 right now but if it doesnt play steam well ill look intoendevour or linux mint lmde. rthanks for the reply. 👍
Nice video man, it inspired me to dual boot it to give it a try and it was good until it told me to restart for an update and now whenever I try and boot it I get something like a failed to start system services error and it just takes me to a console
Ok well your in the console so sign in and then do a
sudo dnf update
Sudo dnf autoremove
@@linuxnext I’ll give that a try later thanks
@@linuxnext I’m guessing the WiFi isn’t working on it as I got loads of couldn’t resolve host names errors
@@Wpar if you want to connect to wifi in tty read this
forum.manjaro.org/t/how-to-connect-to-wifi-from-tty/47687
@@linuxnext Someone in the discord helped me fix it, thanks for your help tho man. What it was was a login manager or something
yeah I tried it yesterday. It froze on me several times so I ditched it. Every time I wanted to change something it froze and I had to wait a minute before I could go on.
Are you using nvidia?
@@linuxnext Yes, RTX 4070 12 gb
Did you test x11? Wayland is used by default and that may cause issues
@@linuxnext Oh man, why didnt I think of that. Yes it was on Wayland. I will give it another go later. Thanks for the advice.
kinda ironic how you got jujutsu kaisen wallpaper and reviewing 'nobara' distro at the same time
:P
I would like to agree. Unfortunately, Nobara doesn't really run smoothly. The graphical updater hangs, Lutris takes forever to start and also crashes when trying to install Ubisoft Connect.
I have an AMD 7600 and would therefore like to use a current distro. Ubuntu 23.10 complicates a lot of things with Snap, so I'll try openSuse or Fedora next.
For lutris use flatpak instead as i have had the same problems with it on system packaged version
But im installing opensuse tumbleweed right now lol as i prefer it for the most part
@@linuxnextI love OpenSUSE but switched to Debian 12 Bookworm and am at least as happy with it. In fact, there's been a couple of things that just worked better and/or easier to get going. Both are great and underrated, IMHO.
I use Nobara on a RX 7800XT and it was rock solid from the beginning! No problem with Lutris, neither with Mesa (24.1 at the moment), wayland, VRR, Davinci Resolve...eveything working just fine here
@ocupacaogamer on amd you can have a very good experience on linux, not so much on nvidia if your going in blind
Arch Garuda is great for gaming as long you know the basics the os basically tells you how to fix it and gives you tips I switch form parrot I like don’t have to spend more time fixing it than gaming like I had to on parrot
GE is great, but I'll stick to Arch. Makes more sense for gamers since it is what SteamOS is based off of.
I tried Nobara but I find *Garuda Dragonized Gaming Edition* as the better option and useful for me. I have several old Windows games already istalled on my hardrive and I can run them flawlessly on GD live USB just using WINE that comes with it pre-installed. I don't even have to tweak anything. 🙂
please drop wallpaper link
twitter.com/artpaji/status/1735726513264492565?t=xKcQ4PnTm_2M2TseFXV1bg&s=19
it"s NobAra, not Nobora...
Installed, granted I failed a lot with check sum before ultimately just clicking start Nobara instead of test.
Whats your hardware by the way?
@@linuxnext 7600 3060ti 32gb ram
I ended up switching to Zorin, this one was giving me random issues, and kept hard freezing on me. Some restarts it would ask for my pass, others it wouldn't. Than I would get some black screens, idk the cause but I decided to try something else.
I have some experience with Linux, used it for a few years on a old PC but never my main system.
@GainingDespair thats why i asked as nvidia has problems under wayland, wayland is used by default on nobara when you first install it, the password is probs the kwallet which tries to use encrypted passwords for your apps which you can disable in the kde settings, all that was needed for nobara was on the login page to select x11 plasma instead of plasma wayland and i think the majority of your problems would have been solved until nvidia steps up their game with wayland support
Zorin should be fine as its up to 17 now so you have the majority of new packages installed and gaming wont be a problem under that as you use nvidia and zorin uses x11 im pretty sure
@@linuxnext I was looking into any updates on Linux support for D2 and I recognized that icon lol.
Seen the reddit comment, but very true enough is enough.
I saw on another video, Nobora only has one developer; which makes it a hard pass for me. If the one person gets sick, hit by a car, has a heart attack, gets married or divorced, has a baby, etc… support is likely to stop. Seen it several times before.
So, Mint, Fedora, or Arch would be better, imo.
i tried nobara 36 some time ago.. and it was great! now i have nobara 39 and it sucks:( freezes.. crashes.. black screens.. horrible gaming performance..
Whats your hardware?
@@linuxnext i7 + gtx1080 laptop
@@sasham4073 and you have tried using just x11 under nobara to see how that goes?
@@linuxnext less issues with x11 but still not as smooth as before
@@sasham4073 hmm was it because you were running gnome before 39 or were you running kde plasma on 36?
I use Arch for gaming btw
Ok, but can it run minecraft?
Thats not even a joke, minecraft is horribly unoptimized to the point that with 4 different performance enhancing mods (designed to be used together) im still using 100% gpu and getting 80 fps while idle on the steam deck, which is my current setup because reasons
I mean yeah, you're using a steamdeck which is pretty low end hardware for a pc, minecraft with shaders and mods runs pretty alright under a rx 6700 10gb, not amazing but it works
I'm not on Nobara, but I just went on flathub, found prism launcher, installed that, logged into my microsoft account through the launcher, then ran a modpack - easy.
i will never not hear 'Dabura'
Us hardware 100% AMD for a better experience whit NOBARA. And find a way to optimize the fan speeds and optimize the cpu on linux. If not you will have an HOT system that may do problem to you hardware.
This was like listening to a one hour long sentence...
:)
Going to Fedora -> Debian testing -> Opensuse -> Nobara. Why all this distrohoping in just one month. You went from Fedora to Nobara which is basically Fedora but bloated.
It's fascinating to see what other distros offer with updates, I'm running arch now sooo :>
Arch is the ultimate gaming distro. 2nd would be debian. Forget about every other distro. Arch is great for bleading edge ! debian would be for ultimate stability.
Forget about all other distros ! But honestly, I'd choose debian for its the only distro that's as stable as Windows 10. But Windows 10 sucks with its moto, forced apps, telemetry, and lack of customization. Fuck 11. My grandmother can break Arch, ubuntu, manjaro, pop os, elementary os... nothings as stable as debian ! Everything besides debian will break even by just updating ! Trust me I've been using linux for over 10 years. Also if you're new fuck everything besides steam, trust the system ! Steam is the only stable way of gaming on Linux, well for at least the hard-core gamers ! GG
So this is the one distro for the average Joe
It can be if you have the right hardware or some knowledge of how to switch to x11 if you're on Nvidia
I'm pretty sold the only thing I will miss is Destiny 2 ... it's really the only game I play ... and I have nearly 3k hours but they refuse to support Linux.
I am tired of windows crap like really tired of it.
Yeah, its a huge rip they dont care about linux, they even have a native port they maintained for google stadia but whatever.
You can go to the reddit feedback post that was made a while back to put your thoughts on the matter
www.reddit.com/r/DestinyTheGame/s/c7Lgq03iaC
Idk why they continue to ignore bringing support and even then its not rlly support as valve will take care of the game with proton. All they have to do is enable the anticheat to not flag us as a cheater
@@linuxnext The game works on Linux, it worked before they moved to battle eye, and I believe it was playable on Linux under their in house anti-cheat but folks would occasionally get banned.
The game is fully compatible however even the anti-cheat natively supports Linux, they just refuse to enable it stating only a fraction of players will use Linux, yet Linux players account for over 90% of error codes/support tickets in games that offer support.
This video might be fantastic but listening to say "pacifically" instead of specifically stressed me tf out
😭😭😭
Valorant don't work unfortunately :/
Yep
Sucks that valorant doesn't work on Linux
True
Hate to say it but honestly ANY other distro is far better for gaming for my setup. Nobara installs on my setup but after doing updates, it boots only to a black screen. I have reproduced this multiple times.
I thought it was just my PC, so I had two different friends try it on their machines. They also get black screens after updating Nobara, therefore I couldn’t fathom recommending this distro to anyone with a straight face. Sure, it installs just fine initially, but the moment you do the first reboot after doing the initial updates .. bye bye, Nobara.
And then i have the opposite result of running nobara for over a year with nvidia, updating it regularly, running my servers and software just fine with some issues but i can fix them easily as i researched what to do in certain situations.
Im not running it on my main anymore as i prefer opensuse tumbleweed as i dont want to use fedora/fedora based distros anymore but iv had problems with nobara + nvidia in the past like updating and the nvidia drivers decide to not work anymore and have to reinstall them. Linux can be weird sometimes with such things like nvidia, i would say tho arch based distros and distros like debian, linux mint or pop os etc handle nvidia better in most cases
@@linuxnext yeah that is so odd. I wish I knew what was causing this for myself and my two friends. One buddy tried this on a desktop and got the black screen issue after updating. For me I try to put Linux distros on a laptop that I take with me on the road as a truck driver (HP Omen gaming laptop that I hate the heck out of and want to replace anyway).
Due to having an Nvidia card in the machine I had to use Nobara-39-KDE-Nvidia-2023-12-30.iso - I wonder if it is just that specific version? I might have to have a go at another version later this week.
@@Faelandaea yeah its possible, you can grab the regular iso and install the drivers after installing, its called like nvidia driver installer or something.
Nobara/linux will use nouveau drivers which works fine for very minimal use until you install the proprietary drivers
Good luck!
✅
just say gnome like a normal person.
nice distro, sure, ultimate for gamers, probably, but beginers stay away..
this is the experience of someone who has some experience with linux but trying to go nubara from win bcos gaming(no exotic hardware, 5700x, 6600xt). begginers approach is to listen to instructions so lets go. use etcher to make usb, usb doesnt work, try again and nothing bcos etcher is huge pos. so i try dd, also usb fails. so back to windows and rufus doesnt disapoint. boots but unknown issue, googling says disable secure boot. after bios, install finishes but for some reason every boot is halted and sometimes takes 4 minutes and sometimes doesnt boot at all. i wont look at logs, begginers dont even know theres logs. but f it, lets try stuff. you look how to install stuff on linux but nobara is not your average linux, its redhat and most tutorials and commands wont work here.. delete and go back to win or mint or whatever. IF a gamer installs nobara and it works fine and installs steam and doesnt need anything else it will be great i guess. didnt work for me.
Ok well, the gnome you're thinking of is the statue you find in a garden, the gnome I'm pronouncing is a desktop environment, 2 different things. The devs of gnome even say it is pronounced the way i pronounced it in the video.
ruclips.net/video/biEbStkdn4k/видео.htmlsi=DbXm-17vN3etgy20
If you're having issues with rufus and etcher then it seems your usb stick might be the problem, iv installed nobara on 3 different computers ranging from a rx 6700 to a rtx 2060, to even my 2015 intel laptop and they all installed nobara perfectly fine.
Make sure secure boot is off for nobara as this is required
Reformat your usb stick or grab a new one
If all else fails then try a different distro or stay on windows
Also redhat is one of the big leaders in the linux space and is very easy to find commands as nobara is based on fedora so there is plenty of documentation on fedoras website
righ meow
Lol I was under the impression you knew what you were talking about, until you started playing Halo Infinite.. that game sucks. The OG halos are the only good halos
I show halo infinite because of the development work it has had under proton and amd not because its a better game, of course the older halos are better