Yeah, I have been using it like that for a while. It is just a single environment variable.
Yeah, I have been using it like that for a while. It is just a single environment variable.


I believe Steam Deck officially supports only Micro SD cards. I used one for about six months and had no issues.


Wasn’t Signal only able to disclose first and last timestamps when a user has connected to their servers when receiving legal requests? I just assumed their protocol made it so that they can’t do it, or they theoretically can but don’t store such logs.


I really loved Nier games. Hope he makes something similarly weird someday.


I got a very recent Thinkpad and it apparently has official support for Ubuntu and Fedora. I went with Fedora KDE.
I highly suggest you stop avoiding it because it will most likely be faster and easier to do something (i.e. system-level changes) with it than not.
Similar to smartphones or MacOS, entire OS is a singular image that is also updated all at once. Core parts of the filesystem is also read-only, meaning it is pretty much impossible to mess things up if you don’t mean to do so deliberately.
The best in this regard are from uBlue project: Bazzite (most popular), Bluefin, Aurora, etc. While Bazzite is intended for gaming (things like Steam are pre-installed), the other are for general use. Bluefin uses GNOME desktop, while Aurora has KDE Plasma desktop environment. Look up their visuals and choose whichever one you like. I prefer Aurora because KDE Plasma is often much more familiar to Windows users.


I guess the closest you can come to this is by taking a screenshot of your desktop and setting it as the background of the display manager. Otherwise, Hyprlock seems like your best option.
First, you should learn about Wine prefixes. Arch Wiki has a good write-up about it.
After the game is installed, you need to edit that setup.exe you added as a non-Steam game and point it to the game’s actual executable.
Steam’s Wine prefixes are usually located in ~/.local/share/Steam/steamapps/compatdata. This directory should have some text config files that you can read to find out what ID Steam has assigned to it.
Also, you might have more luck with Bottles (available through flatpak) which is more suited for such tasks.


Love me some flatpak updates. I hope it will be as good as Android’s sandboxing in the near future.


Since you mentioned that this is a hybrid-GPU laptop, I’d suggest trying to change your default GPU to Nvidia exclusively from the relevant system tray applet. I did use to use Linux Mint on my old Acer gaming laptop and this helped a lot.


Did you install proprietary Nvidia drivers through the Driver Manager app?


I love systemd!


What are your computer specifications? How did you install your games?


Hollow Knight in preparation for Silksong
Well, I just gave my reason for using Arch. Pre-Turing cards are already problematic on Linux, not just with Hyprland.
Arch Linux. I wanted to try Hyprland with something and I felt like it was the easiest with Arch.


A Linux distribution is just the Linux kernel distributed with various other pieces of software that make it usable. Often times, there are multiple software projects that aim achieve the same goal by going in different paths. These are packaged together by the distro maintainers who mostly do this out of passion.
Different distros prioritize different aspects of the software they package and they do this in different ways. To make the best choice for you, it is best to try and understand what each distro aims to do. Here are a few examples out my head:
It looks like you opted for home directory encryption when installing the OS and somehow it got unmounted. It is also likely that by trying to delete encrypted chunks you have corrupted your home directory, which might explain login not working.


It seems like the change affects not just Google Chrome, but the Chromium in general. I assume this will also propogate to all apps using Electron, right?
This, was a busy year. Silksong very much carried my Steam Deck usage.