So i have a gaming desktop that not the best or the newest. What takes up most of my drive space is games, updates, and software’s. Im wondering if i should switch to linux and if linux will improve any performance for my main machine? If you believe i should switch what os should i go with or why or why not should i switch?
I mostly game and do mess with ollama/ai tools because i think that’s cool. I want to do more things in the future but that might beyond my drive space?
What would you advise?
Yes, from my personal experience:

It’ll be a lot faster.
Edit: there’s ollama-cuda on the repos and alpaca-ai on the AUR, but I changed from the self managed to use the local ollama server. For games, there’s lutris, wine-cachyos, proton-cachyos, dxvk-mingw-git and vkd3d-proton-mingw-git all on the repos, so dxvk and vkd3d (the translation layers from directx to vulkan) are updated when the system is updated, but need to be installed with the provided scripts to work automagically after that.
64 GB DDR3, interesting. That’s a lot for that old tech.
It’s a Xeon, workstation and server CPU, so made to take a lot of RAM, 4 memory channels.
Still a lot for that old tech and a desktop gaming computer.
For a server, it’s not a lot.
Yeah but why wouldn’t you when sticks are so cheap now? I have an E5-2680v2 and 32GB of RAM. I can have SO many browser tabs open, and games actually run quicker because Linux does a really good job of using excess RAM as file cache. If a game accesses a texture more than once it almost always ends up in cache. I probably will upgrade to 64GB at some point, because I’ve got two 16GB sticks so only using half the memory channels. Wanna get an E5-2697v2 first though, much better single core performance.
I’m not saying you shouldn’t. I have 64 GB of DDR5. 🤷♂️
I was just reacting to the fact that 64 GB is unusually much for DDR3, since DDR3 is quite old and people usually didn’t have that much RAM back in those days.
I reiterate: I’m not saying it’s a bad thing. Add as much RAM as you like. Who cares.
Well, yeah, but seen as it’s old now it’s dirt cheap, so anyone still running it is gonna have a lot just because they can. It’s not like those old computers aren’t upgradeable lol
There’s no “but”. 🙂 I’m not disagreeing. I was just reacting.
It’s like seeing a whole heap of fossils in one place. It’s super cool and a neat find, but you react because it’s a lot.
I know computers are upgradeable.
Fair fair :)
Doesn’t the E5 2690 support up to 512GiB LRDIMM? Pretty sure my 2697v2 do.
🤷♂️
Given that Windows 11 won’t support your device, Linux may be your only option for a supported OS.
You can use Microsoft Activation Scripts (MAS) to activate Extended Security Updates for extra 3 years of support or upgrade to IoT LTSC for 6 years
Meh. That assumes that games and applications bother still supporting it when EoL for most people has passed. Good option, though.
Linux will continue to support their hardware for easily another decade.
I feel like if you’re asking on this community, you’ve already decided you want to switch and you want help being reassured that it’s viable
The biggest downside of ditching Windows is losing that comfort zone where everything just works without thinking about it. But if you’re cool with putting in some effort to learn new stuff, Linux will feel way snappier right from the start.
Since you’ve got an Nvidia GPU, I’d definitely go with CachyOS - it’s been my best Linux experience for gaming and daily use. The Linux community respects it too: https://cachyos.org/
For your setup specifically, you’ll probably like how much less space Linux takes up compared to Windows, plus it’s way lighter on system resources so your older hardware should perform better. Gaming works surprisingly well these days thanks to Proton, most stuff just runs.
You could dual boot first to test it first without committing. CachyOS would be perfect for what you’re doing.Note how the 3060 already had 12GB VRAM, and they still try to push 8 today
Just dual boot. Boot in to Linux only for a week or two, if it’s working for your needs keep it. If not, delete the partition and it’s like nothing ever happened.
Just dual boot.
They’d “just” have to do a lot of potentially hazardous work for a beginner, shrinking their Windows partition to make room for another partition.
Nah, VM is the way. Try it out, see what flies.
I wouldn’t even go that far. Boot to a live USB of a distro you want to try.
That often doesn’t give you the actual feeling of using it as a daily driver.
Dual boot is the way.
Microsoft/Windows has a habit of messing up for Linux in despite being on separate partitions. I’ve experienced:
- overwrite existing grub
- write its boot sector on a disk it didn’t identify (was part of a software raid setup… So that was fun)
- acquire a lock on devices and not release it even when restarting, so on Linux the “WiFi adapter suddenly doesn’t work”. -… Probably more.
IMO, try out a live USB. Dual boot if you want. But as soon as you can, ditch windows entirely.
Setting a BIOS password is one of the best pieces of advice I’ve read on Lemmy. Once you set that password, Windows shouldn’t be able to overwrite grub. That doesn’t help with devices and storage locks but that removed the biggest frustration for me.
Your choices:
- buy a new PC with Windows 11
- move to linux with your current PC
- stay with Windows 10 on your current PC, and take the risk of using an insecure system.
You missed one:
- build/buy a new PC and put Linux on it
Could be the same as option 1 using dual boot.
If you feel like trying something new, why not try it? Worst case scenario you’re just changing to a different OS anyway. Best case scenario you find something new to learn and tinker with.
They don’t have to wholesale switch, dual-booting is an option.
True
Linux probably wouldn’t make your games any faster, but it could make the OS feel snappier.
Reasons to switch:
- you hate Windows
- you like to customize stuff
- you’re curious about Linux
- you don’t play many MP games
- you tend to leave a ton of stuff open, which makes things run slowly
- saving 40GB or so of space means the world to you (Linux is pretty lean)
Reasons not to switch:
- you need Windows-specific software, like Adobe stuff or games w/ anti-cheat
- you’re not interested in tinkering at all, and having any minor issue would frustrate you
- you want the best possible performance for games
Linux is better at memory and task management, generally speaking, but performance in specific apps depends a ton on the specific app, from being slightly better to being noticeable worse.
As for which Linux distro to go with, I hear good things about Linux Mint, though I don’t use it myself. But honestly, look at the most popular distros and find one that looks cool to you, they’re all pretty good. Ones to check out are:
- Debian (or Linux Mint Debian Edition) - ol’ reliable, may have some issues on newer games
- Fedora - tries to be close to bleeding edge, without as many sharp edges
- Bazzite - gaming focus, tries to imitate Steam OS
- openSUSE Tumbleweed - my personal daily driver, though I generally don’t recommend it for new users since there’s not a huge community to find help
There are tons more great ones. If you list your must-have apps/games, maybe someone can give a better recommendation, though honestly most distros are similar enough that if it works on one, it’ll work anywhere.
Debian (or Linux Mint Debian Edition) - ol’ reliable, may have some issues on newer games
Used to, in the first year after Steam Linux client released, because of old libc. But since then, I’ve had only one or two games not work because of nvidia drivers not being new enough.
Just a point about phrasing but pretty much all MP games work flawlessly, just not the esports titles with draconian anticheats.
Sure, my point is anti-cheat, which is a pretty common feature of MP games, at least the popular ones. But yeah, I could’ve been more clear, thanks for the correction.
It’s equally a pro and a con but for me it’s a huge pro:
You can know exactly what your computer is doing because it will tell you!!
You can see highly verbose logs, granted it’s not easy to interpret without the necessary skills but Chatgpt doesn’t mind it if you dump 100 lines into a print and just say “fix my shit”, I do that routinely. I hated how windows would just freeze up and flash a popup like “Program not working” and I have to guess what’s going on by gauging the feeling of the software. I want exactly what I want to happen and Linux just does it without fighting me
Iirc Intel xeon is shitty, installing linux might make your overall experience with your computer better. Especially if you run something like xfce as the desktop environment.
Xeon are just server SKUs, nothing wrong with them.
oooh, i had them confused with celerons
A xeon plus 3060 is an interesting combo…
He probably slapped the GPU onto a workstation.
Switch when Microsoft ads, bloat, telemetry and reboots starts to test your sanity. Didn’t switch if everything seems fine.
Lots of mention of dual booting- I recommend getting an e-waste tier 256gb SATA SSD for your first Linux install if you just want to try it out.
No one wants those old drives because they are small but they are plenty quick and you only need 15 to 30 gigs for most distros.
I second this. Chances are high that OP ends up reinstalling multiple times (either to check out multiple distros or after they accidentally nuked the system). Doing so on a separate SSD so they don’t accidentally wipe their data during reinstall and so they don’t have to constantly migrate data is a good plan.
Third this move. Nvme are under $20 cheap way to experiment
Everyone manages to format the wrong partition at least once when starting out with installing different Linux distros.
I haven’t. That wasn’t one of the mistakes I made!
Lucky you!
I picked up a Samsung m.2 280 or 260 gb guy on eBay for like ten bucks. I don’t remember the size exactly, just that it wasn’t the normal binary 256gb.
They sell 250 on 256 and 500 on 512, holding back the 6/12 gigs for wear leveling and other NAND management functions. At least that’s what I understand.
Just looked it up and it was 240gb, and made by pny. My b.
Can you use the existing Windows partition for the games though (without it fucking them up)? Because while Linux fits in that easily, games do not.
Probably not, just trying to save the guy a few bucks. Try some games one at a time that do fit, and rely on protondb for the ones that don’t. Then decide to move over and wipe windows.
Linux has NTFS drivers. Should work fine.












