Hi everyone,

I’m looking to buy a new gaming rig as my current machine feels like it’s getting a bit dated. Been gaming on Linux for the past 6 months to a year. Ditched Windows around the time they announced ads and that recall bullshit.

What are your experiences with gfx cards and their drivers? I haven’t bought AMD (gfx) in… Over 20 years. Online results show conflicting answers. Some swear by AMD, others say the drivers are unstable and they need to reboot when switching games. Other say never to update the drivers as long as stuff works.

Currently have an Nvidia 2080 super. Which has served me quite well. But newer games are starting to give it a hard time. Never really had any driver related issue.

I have a friend with an AMD gfx ( windows) and he’s not super happy with it. Game/pc crashes related to it apparently. So I’m a bit on the fence about AMD.

I’m not sure what to look for in a cpu. I currently have an AMD. I guess more expensive is better and that’s about it? Is there a noticeable benefit of the amd 9 vs AMD 7 series?

I’m not looking to overclock any of the hardware.

What’s the standard regarding memory nowadays? I’ve got 16 in my current rig, and more can’t hurt. I would never go under 16. Was looking at 32 but I’ve seen PCs with 64 and wondered if that is just overkill or not.

I’ve mainly games on nobara, but recently switched to bazzite as I’ve been meaning to give that a go. I didn’t really have any complaints om nobara.

Side note: my monitor supports Nvidia whatsitcalled, but not free sync I think.

  • electricprism@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    Your friend is right – AMD graphics on Windows can be a pain (last I checked)

    That said the reverse is true on Linux, AMD GPU is fucking sweetas – I got at least a dozen or 2 dozen AMD GPUs > 2016 and they kick ass, never gonna give them up or let them down :P

    There’s a reason AMD is crushing it on Linux

  • SurvivalMariner@lemm.ee
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    5 days ago

    I have Radeon 6900 rx and it games sweet on Linux. I’ve played games on Windows with it too without issue (dual boot).

    Generally, AMD is king on Linux, Nvidia is suffering (had drivers updates break OS installs). Nvidia is only really if you want ray tracing or Cuda, and I’ve never needed to.

    OpenSuse Tumbleweed is my distro of choice. Up to date kernel. Rolling distro. Stable.

  • donio@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I had similar worries about the AMD driver stability before I switched from NV about 5 years ago. But my experience has been great even back then and things have only improved since.

    One data point to consider is that Valve is shipping the Steam Deck with an AMD AMU and stability and compatibility is paramount for that use case.

  • anamethatisnt@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    CPU
    Some games benefit a lot from the large L3 cache in the X3D cpus, f.e. the AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D. Check whether it is true for the ones you play.
    GPU
    I’m running an AMD 6650XT GPU in Linux without any trouble, I even use vfio to use it in a Fedora VM without errors.
    RAM
    Buying 2x32GB gives you enough RAM to run a bunch of VMs while gaming. 2x16GB is more than enough for a gaming rig.

  • Da Bald Eagul@feddit.nl
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    7 days ago

    AMD Ryzen 7000 vs 9000 isn’t a huge difference iirc, mostly more efficient. The X3D variants are definitely worth it for gaming performance though, so I’d wait for the 9000 X3D reviews to compare.

    32GBs is plenty of RAM for now, 64GB is overkill for gaming purposes. I don’t use 100% of my RAM ever and that’s with Discord and a bunch of browser tabs open while playing Cyberpunk or heavily modded Minecraft.

    For the GPU, I currently use a 7900 XTX and haven’t had issues running that with Manjaro Linux. Haven’t used an Nvidia GPU with Linux, but from what I can tell their support was/is dubious but improving.

    • Telorand@reddthat.com
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      7 days ago

      Since AMD has open source drivers, their cards tend to have better support for most things (like Wayland).

      But in general, I think you can pick either and be fine. I have an old laptop with a GTX 960M, and it works great with Bazzite and the latest Nvidia drivers. My main desktop (RTX 3060ti) I haven’t yet switched, but the only distro that didn’t work on live media was MX Linux (it had problems with multiple monitors).

  • fluckx@lemmy.worldOP
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    7 days ago

    Is there anything i should steer clear of mainboard wise? MSI/TUF gaming? Anything that is overpriced and not necessarily better quality?

    • anamethatisnt@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Priority one for me is that the motherboard allows for BIOS Firmware updates from a USB drive without having to boot an operating system. The user manual is usually the fastest way to verify that one.
      Then I would look at PCIe slots, if I bought a new motherboard today I would want to have at least one PCIe 5.0 x16 slot and one PCIe 5.0 m.2 slot.

      Oh, and searching the net for people having trouble with the motherboards networking or bluetooth when running linux distros is always a good idea.