- cross-posted to:
- gaming@lemmy.zip
- cross-posted to:
- gaming@lemmy.zip
Marketshare growth will come. Keep putting down the gravel for the trail that everyone will use eventually.
I believe once win 10 hits eol we’ll see more users jump ship, myself included.
w7 EOL was my push, so you may be right
that’ll most likely be me, too. I’m excited for the change, the steam deck desktop mode made me a believer lol
This is the best summary I could come up with:
While there’s been a clear drop, the Linux user share on Steam for June 2024 still remains about 2% showing the clear upwards trend overall.
Interestingly, this is another month where Simplified Chinese as a language on Steam saw a jump, and quite often we see Linux drop when this happens.
According to Valve the latest operating system details are:
For Linux, the Steam Deck with SteamOS continues propping up the numbers with it being the most popular by far.
Freedesktop SDK 23.08 (Flatpak runtime) 64 bit 6.71% +0.66%
Ubuntu Core 22 64 bit (Steam Snap) 2.97% +0.35%
The original article contains 177 words, the summary contains 98 words. Saved 45%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
What’s the project here? 50% by 2200? That’s a very slow rise.
Depend on the flow, when the gaming industry row against it (ie: Epic store exclusivity to exclude Linux’s support by indie develeopers, Anti-cheat that bar Linux support away) Linux adoption stay around 1% while sustaining the growth of PC gaming (it mean Linux keep growth together anyway).
Now, with SteamDeck we have a situation where the “row against” is still there, albeit much lower because publisher AAA aren’t too sure they want to be kept out SteamDeck’s business.
We still see how much fast Linux adoption will growth when the industry goes “neutral” (aka: do not go against with Anticheat)… and even when, someday maybe, they will just “support”.
So far now, Linux is going great if you consider AAA publisher did fail to sink it down (the only single big entity that openly support (not even exclusively) is Valve).
When you go against the flow you look slow: but the energy behind you is double than anybody else.
One thing that might really help would be Valve releasing an official version of SteamOS to the public. It would hopefully get us more handhelds running SteamOS natively and people switching their PCs, particularly if they can release it before the Win10 EOL date.
Sure, projects like Bazzite exist, but I don’t think those have enough reach beyond the people already running some form of Linux.