My teenage son wants to try a new distro for gaming. Our family has been using pop os for years, but he wants to try something new. The main three I see are
nobara (fedora based)
garuda (arch based)
drauger (ubuntu based)
The machine he's using is a 2018 Intel nuc. It has a strong processor (core i7) but no discrete graphics. I can't tell which (if any) of the distros above would be better or worse for his case.
Reading around, it seems like Garuda might be slightly more fiddly. And, Drauger I only saw mentioned in a couple of articles, but not on this forum. Are these impressions correct? Do you have any other advice for us?!
Gaming? Nobara. It is created and optimized for gaming by Glorious Eggroll, creator of Proton-GE. He is the most knowledgable Person I knpw about Linux gaming and therefore Nobara is the right choice for me.
I've been using Fedora and honestly I'm impressed. Especially since version 39. It's solid, stable, gaming just works. It requires some initial setup with COPR and installation might not be as straight forward but it's definitely not hard.
I may get downvoted but make sure you're using X11 for now because Xwayland latency is real. Wine on Wayland is around the corner but not there yet. And use Steam from COPR not flatpak. Besides that, in my opinion, it's a dream setup.
Honestly it actually may be just fine, I had some trouble from before when I was trying distros and re-learning the current state of Linux (after a 3 years break) and looking back, they may have been related to Wayland or something else entirely instead of flatpak itself.
I may be wrong too but I think game detection on Discord won't work for flatpak Steam (and flatpak Discord). I may be wrong though.
I'm still not sure what he's trying to achieve by switching. Is he having issues with pop OS? Or does he just want to try something different?
I would say anything Ubuntu based will be so similar as to not be interesting, so maybe pick something different. Nobara and Garuda are different, but I honestly don't know what they offer to someone looking to try something new since they essentially do all the config for you. So my recommendation is one of the following:
Fedora - most nobara guides should be compatible, but it does require a little effort to get set up (not a ton, just need to install stuff)
Tumbleweed - rolling like Arch, but without the upgrade issues; it's what I use and I think it's solid
Mint Debian edition - should be pretty similar to pop OS since Ubuntu/pop OS is based on Debian, but perhaps different enough to be interesting
Those are all major distros and thus should have lots of help available online.
I think he wants to try something different. He was frustrated that gaming on Linux requires "so much fiddling" (the kids today truly have no idea). So he tried installing windows, and that went about as well as you could expect (I did try to warn him, but he had to see for himself). So, he's ready to reinstall Linux, and I suggested trying a gaming distro just so he doesn't feel like it was a total waste of time.
He can also dual boot it between two distros. I have both Linux Mint Debian for stability and Garuda for current updates that benefit gaming. I recommend installing Linux Mint first and then Garuda, and use Garuda’s boot manager, which can also be customized pretty well from the setup assistant.
edit: by setup assistant I meant a program that’s available after initial install, not during install.
If you have lower expectations, even a potato able to run (just) a web browser can be a "gaming PC"thanks to cloud gaming. Still, theres no such thing as a "best" distro for (something) -- all distros are equally good and able to do any sort of task.
I’m using Garuda and it’s great. Get the gaming edition distro and it installs most everything you need. Most anything that’s not installed by default is easy to add any time from the setup assistant. It’s simple enough to change the default theme or switch to a different desktop manager.
The biggest danger you’re going to run into is that those distros all lie downstream of the real changes, so non-gaming (and potentially security related) fixes might be slow or incompatible.
If you go with something like Fedora or Ubuntu, there is going to be full support on all the core things, and you can build the gaming experience you want on top. Any changes that Nobara or Drauger are making to their distros you could probably make yourself.
(I’ve never used any of those distros, but I’ve found winehq and other tools on Fedora more than sufficient)
I know that any distro can be a gaming distro in principle, but we don't really know what changes we should be making to improve his experience, so that's what we're hoping one of the gaming distros can help with. I'm fairly comfortable with what I need to do for my daily use, but not so much for games.
The biggest danger you’re going to run into is that those distros all lie downstream of the real changes, so non-gaming (and potentially security related) fixes might be slow or incompatible.
From what I've read about Brazzite, their release process seems fairly automated and given that it's an Universal Blue project, I have faith that this won't suffer from such problems for the foreseeable future.
They rebuild their images once a day iirc, which should be fast enough even for security related issues. And because of automated updates, systems will probably receive updates more timely than on regular distros (by default, it's always configurable).