In 2020 I built a gaming PC and at the time decided to dual boot because I wasn’t going to spend all this money and miss out on some games. However, not 6 months later I dissolved the dual boot config because my son and I never found a game we cared to try that was Windows only.
Proton is a translation layer that helps run Windows games in Linux. It works seamlessly with Steam so you don’t have to worry about it at all… so far, ZERO problems. Of course, YMMV depending on the games you are interested in; however, you can check in advance in ProtonDB, this site will tell you if the game you want to play can be played well on Linux (assuming the game is not ported already).
I also went with a derivative Linux distro that is geared toward gaming so it comes with almost everything you’d need. It’s called GarudaLinux I liked it so much it is now my daily driver for work as well (even though this is one of those “risky” Linux distro since it is a rolling release, meaning you are on the edge of tech available, and I update it weekly… other than some small issues here and there, it’s been going strong for 4 years)
If you have a movie collection, you’d have no problem either unless they are DMR protected somehow… if so, there are ways to watch them but it would depend on what you downloaded… However, if these fishes we are talking about came from the high seas, you’d have no problem. There are some discrepancies regarding hardware support for certain codecs but it all boils down to efficiency, not whether you can play them or not.
I have a VAST collection (3500+ movies, 400 TV shows) in a Linux server that I access throughout my house with many devices (PCs, phones, FireTV sticks, Raspberry Pi, etc) by using an Emby server… Emby is free to use but you get to pay for some features… if you want the fully free and open source version you can go with Jellyfin… I only went with Emby because 6 years ago (maybe more?) when I started, Jellyfin was a bit behind… now they have caught up but I already bought Emby so I keep using it.
Wow, you somehow answered my follow up before I could even ask it.
My main goal was to eventually do a plex or jellyfin type setup for the house. Good to hear that it works just as well on Linux. Is the setup more difficult, or are there enough guides and documentation that it’s not too bad?
Absolutely!
In 2020 I built a gaming PC and at the time decided to dual boot because I wasn’t going to spend all this money and miss out on some games. However, not 6 months later I dissolved the dual boot config because my son and I never found a game we cared to try that was Windows only.
Proton is a translation layer that helps run Windows games in Linux. It works seamlessly with Steam so you don’t have to worry about it at all… so far, ZERO problems. Of course, YMMV depending on the games you are interested in; however, you can check in advance in ProtonDB, this site will tell you if the game you want to play can be played well on Linux (assuming the game is not ported already).
I also went with a derivative Linux distro that is geared toward gaming so it comes with almost everything you’d need. It’s called GarudaLinux I liked it so much it is now my daily driver for work as well (even though this is one of those “risky” Linux distro since it is a rolling release, meaning you are on the edge of tech available, and I update it weekly… other than some small issues here and there, it’s been going strong for 4 years)
If you have a movie collection, you’d have no problem either unless they are DMR protected somehow… if so, there are ways to watch them but it would depend on what you downloaded… However, if these fishes we are talking about came from the high seas, you’d have no problem. There are some discrepancies regarding hardware support for certain codecs but it all boils down to efficiency, not whether you can play them or not.
I have a VAST collection (3500+ movies, 400 TV shows) in a Linux server that I access throughout my house with many devices (PCs, phones, FireTV sticks, Raspberry Pi, etc) by using an Emby server… Emby is free to use but you get to pay for some features… if you want the fully free and open source version you can go with Jellyfin… I only went with Emby because 6 years ago (maybe more?) when I started, Jellyfin was a bit behind… now they have caught up but I already bought Emby so I keep using it.
Wow, you somehow answered my follow up before I could even ask it.
My main goal was to eventually do a plex or jellyfin type setup for the house. Good to hear that it works just as well on Linux. Is the setup more difficult, or are there enough guides and documentation that it’s not too bad?
Plex and Jellyfin both work fine on Linux. Installing is as simple as it is on Windows, because they offer Linux downloads as well.
Glad I could help.
Installing Emby/Jellyfin is dead easy… you won’t have trouble. Literally install, then run the web interface and configure from there