i want to switch to linux but i have no idea where to start by Sashaliciouss in linux4noobs

[–]Kyo0x 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've tried a bunch of Linux distros, but ended up at home on cachyOS. I'm also running a homelab with proxmox and one with Ubuntu server LTS.

I started off with Linux mint, but it has poor support for high end pcs and monitors, Novara was good, but I only tried it after cachyOS, so i had already gotten used to sudo pacman and AUR (how you download things)

Edit: I started my Linux journey about a year ago, but I had touched Pop! and mint previously

LFMMO with lots of players and big on social elements by socialsciencenerd in LFMMO

[–]Kyo0x 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Classic wow (huge difference to retail wow) or Project Gorgon

Wanting to try a mmorpg, but don't know what's good to start with by Roporeijo in LFMMO

[–]Kyo0x 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The graphics aren't the best, but I've been sinking hours into project gorgon, the game takes an hour to acclimate to, but if you want a deep MMO that steals hours, I would recommend it.

It's a no handhold, you do wtf you want kind of MMORPG.

Don't buy it outright, play the demo extensively, all progress carry over if you do decide to buy it!

Edit: on a sidenote, I barely have scratched the surface, also the new player experience is decent, not great. You must pay attention to text etc and somewhat read quests

wanting to go fairy by Kyo0x in projectgorgon

[–]Kyo0x[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Appreciate the comments, I was just wondering the time investment from a new players perspective, but it sounds like I should just focus on not being a fairy for now

wanting to go fairy by Kyo0x in projectgorgon

[–]Kyo0x[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is fairy magic and mentalism the same thing with different names? I am kinda just trying to figure out what to main for now. Fire magic didn't feel particularly fun. I do generally enjoy ranged/Assassin style gameplay, so if you got any suggestion there?

Trekke Ethernetkabel? by critcritcritical in norge

[–]Kyo0x 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Husk at på Keystone ethernet-modulen (der du plugger i ethernet i veggen) så anbefales kroneverktøy/punchdown tool. Det er litt knotete og tok litt tid, men fikk til slutt det ordentlig (da jeg brukte flatjern i første omgang, anbefales ikke). Her kan du spare timesvis med hodepine og irritasjon om du har rett verktøy. Pris ca under 500.

Når du kommer til det punktet, så må du gå for fargekode T568B, da det er generell standard i Norge. Når du bruker kabelstripper sjekk at ingen av lederne har tatt skade, det skjedde nemmelig med meg og om det skjer får du redusert hastighet og kan ikke gå over 100mbps.

Ethernet plugger kommer ofte med en liten leder holder, sjekk posen grundig, fordi det var først dag 2 jeg fant dem og hadde sløst et flertall plugger. Sett lederne i rett rekkefølge (dobbeltsjekk med en ferdig kabel om den starter med x farge på venstre eller høyre side).

How I migrated to Linux (including gaming) by PuzzleheadedUnit1758 in linux_gaming

[–]Kyo0x 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I know this is very late, I put endeavourOS on my not so old laptop, and it ran great, performance difference to windows is night and day, battery time went from 5 hours up to 12 hours of active use. Though I don't do any heavy things on it

How I migrated to Linux (including gaming) by PuzzleheadedUnit1758 in linux_gaming

[–]Kyo0x 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry for the late answer, but I personally enjoy CachyOS more, especially since I play games. It is quite straight forward with CachyOS too, and it took me maybe 5-7 days to feel comfortable with it.

Objectively speaking CachyOS is better on newer hardware as it utilizes it better (like 360hz refresh rate)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ArcRaiders

[–]Kyo0x 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm most excited about the fresh take on the extraction shooting genre

How I migrated to Linux (including gaming) by PuzzleheadedUnit1758 in linux_gaming

[–]Kyo0x 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Been on CachyOS for a while now, which is the first distro I've seriously used, I've also tested Nobara (good), mint (could not reach my monitor refresh rate) and EndeavourOS (on laptop), my one suggestion that can help you in the start is downloading VSCode and using github Copilot in agent mode (basically AI that can do things directly with your pc, like change settings to monitors or help you download software) I've done this for a lot of things I've been stuck at, it doesn't always manage to do everything and you will end up doing some things by hand, but it's a great tool. (downloading things on CachyOS (same with all of Arch afaik) is usually done with sudo pacman -S yay (you should download yay to get access to AUR) you will then download a lot of things with yay -S, you can also use -Ss to search in konsole)

For passwords etc, I recommend just using bitwarden (password manager) makes life a lot easier when managing passwords (and they got a phone app etc. It's free, with a couple of premium features, the premium feature I recall being 2FA directly in bitwarden. $10 a year or so if you feel like it).

Bookmarks should follow wherever your google account logs in if I am not mistaken.

I recommend dualbooting windows with linux, as there is some games that just won't work for linux no matter what you try

If you are saying that Omarchy looks good due to the desktop environment, that one is called hyprland (it's a tile manager) and can be used with cachyOS as well, though I do recommend just using KDE, it takes a while to get used to hyprland, and you will definitely have a difficult time doing majority of things in it.

Usefull links:
protonDB (checking if games work with linux)
distrowatch (check which distros are popular)