Yes, if Linux embraced every game and software available.
Yes, if Linux embraced every game and software available.
fedora's GPU passthrough capabilities are as impressive as they advertise, so I’m probably sticking with fedora and adding another GPU for a Windows gaming VM. The main reason I stay on Windows isn’t about preference—it’s more about familiarity with NVIDIA products.
The nearest option we have right now is installing Linux directly, followed by launching a Windows virtual machine with GPU capabilities through a pass-through setup. This approach fits my plan for upgrading to Ryzen, since my 3770K can't handle GPU pass-through.
Would you accept a thousand dollars for nothing? I don’t understand why anyone would stick with a less efficient operating system that monitors you and forces third-party apps to run through it. If you need to check the Candy Crush app in Windows Explorer, it’s not worth it. Pushing a weaker web browsing service when better options exist is just poor choice.
Despite everything being functional, the setup process would still be a bit complicated, but since I’m not into gaming much, I might go ahead and try it.
The fedora gpu passthrough feature isn’t brand new—it’s just a simpler interface built on the backend. Currently, you’re spending only a few minutes tweaking text files, and that’s it.
they say it should be a simple one-click process, not the confusing experience it’s turned into so far, definitely checking out Unraid’s official guide that seems more like a friendly wish than real instructions