I was wondering what distro is best for running games. I know you use Cadega, but I'm not sure if the distro matters, so I decided to ask this question.
Thanks
onlinebacon
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I was wondering what distro is best for running games. I know you use Cadega, but I'm not sure if the distro matters, so I decided to ask this question.
Thanks
onlinebacon
I don't think it really matters all that much, but I would recommend going with one of the "big name" distros just so that more people would be able to help if you run into problems.
OK,
Thanks for the quick reply dude.
onlinebacon :wink:
Cedega is used to run games on Linux that were originally designed to run on MS Windows. It *should* run on just about any Linux distribution, but it may not work at all on your hardware regardless of your distro (my experience).Quote:
Originally Posted by onlinebacon
If you want an OS just to play games, use MS Windows. The games will always run better on the OS for which they were designed. I don't mean to sound rude here, but a lot of people don't realize that Linux is a completely different animal than MS Windows. :wink:
Linux is a animal (a penguin), while Windows is an imanimate object that lets bad people, sorry I mean light into a room.Quote:
Originally Posted by techieMoe
dylunio
I've run UT2003 in mandrake but then again it had a linux install.
I've been trying to find out if someone has already asked a gaming sound question but I don't think I'm using the search engine of this site propperly.
Yes, there are a few notable games that have native Linux versions, often installable through the Win32 game CDs. Off the top of my head these include Doom 1-3, Quake 1-3, Unreal Tournament, UT2003, UT2004, Neverwinter Nights, Return to Castle Wolfenstein, and probably more that I can't think of right now. Installers are also available for some games using WINE or Cedega, on this site.Quote:
Originally Posted by apparition
I usually don't buy games anymore unless they release a linux version, and then I will contact the company and thank them for making a linux version.
Of course, that severely cuts down my choices as far as gaming is concerned, but hey...if I wanted to play games that much, I'd just buy a console.
One of the leaner and faster Distros. Slackware(my choice distro), Gentoo, or Debian possibly. The differences will still be minimal, however. I fine Gentoo and Slackware to be among the fastest distrobutions you can use, and consquently also the fastest gaming distrobutions.
thanks for all of the replies people, that site was really useful.
onlinebacon