It feels like I mine bitcoins for our Great Daddy Gaben every other update, setting my CPU at 100% for a long time.
I know it makes difference (to skipping it and eating lags), it works, but how it doesn't use previous literal gigabytes of generated shaders, starting from 0% every time? Why it takes so much time?
I feel like I'm a dumbass and I miss something obvious. Or I just feel like I'm alone with it? Do you guys all deal with it?
Am sitting at 66% percents, my PC heats like it renders video in Premiere, just to let me play the game I've played yesterday again. Guess all my recycling and replanting routine can fuck right off with that power consumption. Sorry, nature, I tried.
But anyway if you are tired of it or knows some tricks, write what's on your mind.
It's faster than when I first came to Linux, sure. And I see that my 6yo mid setup doesn't work okay in big games if I skip this, and is slower than most recent builds of the same price range.
I think honestly if you're not willing to upgrade your pc there's not a lot you can do other than wait for potential optimization
Shader caching on a modern pc for anything but big chunky triple a games takes less than 5 minutes
Yup, shader updates on Steam dropped significantly when I upgraded my GTX 960 to an RX 6650XT.
It still takes some time on my 3500U APU laptop, but I rarely play anything on that system.