SOTTR can now run in proton-experimental (it used to crash due to a missing vulkan feature), but how does it compare to the native version?

Normally I would just use the native version, but got the game from epic, which doesn’t provide the native build. So if I wanted to run native I would have to acquire the game from other sources (keep in mind that I own the game on epic), which is less than ideal. But I wouldn’t do it if there’s no advantage.

  • @Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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    51 month ago

    Just picked it up for Steam Deck a few days ago, actually. It works great running natively, but I haven’t run the Windows version.

    I don’t see a reason to re-buy it unless you’re having Proton issues with the one that you already have.

    • @edinbruh@feddit.itOP
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      1 month ago

      The only “problem” is that it’s not making 60 fps even in the benchmark. Which is fine, it’s a heavy game, but I would be bummed if it was due to proton overhead and not due to my gpu

  • Björn Tantau
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    1 month ago

    Not sure about Shadow but for the older games I prefer the Windows version. It looks better, runs better and is less buggy. A shame really. I explicitly bought those games when they got Linux support. But nowadays the Windows version is far superior.

    Haven’t watched it yet, but I think this video covers that. https://youtu.be/TjbDyrRZX0o