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Semyon2020-08-22 16:40:54
linux
Semyon, 2020-08-22 16:40:54

How to set up linux for graphics and games?

There is a laptop with KDE Manjaro, a kernel recommended by the system, 16GB of RAM, 1TB ssd, core i7 8th, nvidia 1050 Ti (notebook version), internet 130 mb/s. Kska and team fortress 2 are at minimum, the blender 3d editor is lagging like hell, the system just slows down a bit. On Windows, the same games ran great on medium, I'm not talking about blender at all.
I tried hybrid drivers from nvidia intel-nvidia-440xx-prime and intel-nvidia-435xx-prime, I didn’t notice a difference, I’ll say right away that I registered prime-run in the software launch command. GL THREADED OPTIMIZATIONS enabled. I can't figure out where the lags come from. I categorically do not want to go back to Windows

Ps Most likely I forgot to indicate something necessary, I will be glad to clarify in the comments.

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3 answer(s)
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Semyon, 2020-10-20
@Hitreno

As a result, I switched to Pop!_os, based on bubuntu + Nvidia prime. Performance, oddly enough, improved, the game went. Looks like the problem is in the axis or most likely in my curve setting

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Ronald McDonald, 2020-08-22
@Zoominger

Linux? Games? Lol. TuxRacer, perhaps.
Linux is not a desktop system, and even more so not for games, for games - Windows. The video driver for Linux is just disgusting, video cards on Nvidia are not revealed at all.

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Valentine, 2020-08-23
@ProFfeSsoRr

So, is there definitely a hybrid video, is there Nvidia Optimus? Or maybe you can turn off the Intel vidyahu completely, install proprietary nvidia drivers and see what happens. If everything goes so fast, then the problem is somewhere in switching video cards.

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