Welp 11 月 12 日 下午 4:51
with the launch of new hardware, will Proton play nice?
to fully explain, the biggest hurdle for Steam OS adoption is Kernel level anti cheat, whether you mind it or not doesnt matter if you want to play certain popular games you have to grant access to it.

so im curious, did they finally resolve the issue? i know they found work arounds (supposedly) with EAsy and Battleye, but what about others? if they are investing in hardware again i think it would be a priority?
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cSg|mc-Hotsauce 11 月 12 日 下午 5:18 
引用自 Welp
with the launch of new hardware, will Proton play nice?

to fully explain, the biggest hurdle for Steam OS adoption is Kernel level anti cheat, whether you mind it or not doesnt matter if you want to play certain popular games you have to grant access to it.

so im curious, did they finally resolve the issue? i know they found work arounds (supposedly) with EAsy and Battleye, but what about others? if they are investing in hardware again i think it would be a priority?

Some developers do not want to support Linux at all, like CoD.

:nkCool:
Welp 11 月 12 日 下午 5:26 
I can understand that; there is no incentive for developers to support Linux with only a 2.5% market share of the OS market.

That’s why it’s up to Valve and other Linux supporters to champion the cause and Valve has done an amazing job thus far.

From What I’ve seen in research is that the kernel issue is the biggest hold back, most people (like me) don’t want to have to set up a duo OS on their machine just to play a few games on windows haha, we lazy.

So once again, and I hope some one answers this, with the launch of the new hardware, has their been any word from valve about improvements to that issue?
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