Windows and Linux compatible with SSDs and traditional hard drives.
Windows and Linux compatible with SSDs and traditional hard drives.
The choice is clear: preference. I've looked into VMs but haven't focused much on placing a Windows VM inside Linux. Edit - some ideas... Running Windows alongside Linux: I wouldn't pursue this. The main Linux setup would act as a virtualization host. But a Linux VM within Windows could work only temporarily. Linux as the core with a Windows VM: I'd have to weigh the pros. If I can still fully leverage my hardware—especially for gaming—I might stick with Linux 100% of the time, using a Windows VM just for gaming sessions. Switching between Linux and Windows as main: This ensures maximum resource use when gaming in Windows and Linux for other tasks, except for shared storage. I'm not a big fan of multi-booting anymore; VMs are still useful. I need to check if I can fully optimize my hardware with high-quality Windows games using a VM inside Linux. Otherwise, this seems like the path I should consider, though I'm open to alternatives: a Linux server with many VMs for general use, or a gaming-focused Windows VM.
SteamOS is just one of many Linux distributions, and its storage needs are limited to that specific system. Running Steam on Linux doesn’t require such large amounts of space.