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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • So RetroArch is the standard front end for the open source Libretro collection of emulation engines/cores. It’s a decent interface but not necessarily to everyone’s tastes. The Libretro cores are excellent and give a standardised way of managing and emulating a whole range of game systems.

    ES-DE is a frontend for numerous emulators, aimed at helping people organise their games collections and emulators in a visual way. It can act as a good front-end for RetroArch, as well as other emulators. It’s a more customisable and perhaps more user friendly experience, which also works well with controllers.

    Retroarch + ES-DE is a common combination, and for Linux users (including Steam Deck) RetroDECK is one great option. RetroDECK is a single preconfigured Flatpak with ES-DE, Retroarch and other emulators all packaged together and containerised. All you have to do is install the flatpak, then add the games and ROMs as wanted.

    EmuDeck is another option which again combines RetroArch + ES-DE amongst other tools. It’s available for Linux including SteamOS, but also Windows and Android. It’s an installation script that allows you to select the emulators and tools you want and it’ll install them all from available stores or from projects websites, and then configure them on your system. Then you add your games and ROMs as wanted.





  • I think they were just pointing out that this is the problem with subscription services. You own nothing and you’re screwed when the service goes down.

    It really doesn’t take “ludicrous amounts of time and money” to build a private library. It’s interesting how the subscription giants have managed to change people’s perceptions - when you buy content to keep, you keep some of the value, but when you subscribe you’re just getting a time pass to use someone else’s library and won’t see that money again.

    They sold the proposition on convenience when everything was in one place, but now it’s all fragmented it’s a waste of money.

    And of course plenty of people are building media libraries for free by sailing the seas.


  • I have played with Arch in a VM - I learnt a lot about how Linux works setting it up. But the tutorials and guides are good, and you end up with a lean system with just what you want in it, and pretty much all configured directly by you.

    I can see why Arch is a popular distro and base for other distros (like Manjero and currently rapidly growing CachyOS).

    But I’m not at the point I’d want to main it. My issue is the concern that because everything is set up by me, it’s a much more unique system so if something breaks it could be a whole myriad of my own choices that are the cause. I’m nervous about having to problem solve things when they break and solutions not working because of how my particular system is configured. It’s probably a bit irrational but I do quite like being on an distro that lots of other people have the exact same configuration as me, so when things break there is lots of generic help out there.

    That said I would consider arch based distros like Manjaro or CachyOS as they are in that vain of mostly standardised distro.


  • If you want to try Pop OS, go ahead. The most important thing is back up data you want to keep - it’s not a bad idea to have a dedicated partition for your home folder and another for the OS to help with fixing problems or moving to another distro, but backups off your laptop are critically important. Then if you don’t like a particular distro, or you fuck up, you can install another and restore your data from backup.

    Personally I use OpenSuSE Tumbleweed, I’ve tried quite a few distros and I think generally for gaming they’re much the same. OpenSuSE has a good user interface in YaST for tweaking and keeping the system how I want it. I like being on a distro with a big install base and linked into an enterprise distro as there is an incentive to test rigorously and also fix things when they break. But Tumbleweed is a rolling release so there will still occasionally be problems.

    If you want stability and no headaches then I’d go for a decent point release distro with a big install base overall. I’d suggest OpenSuSE Leap or Fedora KDE over smaller niche/community distros. Go for Gnome equivalents if that’s your thing. I have gone off Mint in recent months as I think too much support out on the Web is out of date and provides bad solutions to problems (such as adding random ubuntu repos to install software). Mint itself.Is a decent distro.

    I’d avoid Ubuntu due to Snap, I’d avoid Debian due to its slow upgrade cycle (very stable distro but may not be the best for high end gaming and tweaking), and I’d avoid Arch due to the complexity of set up (unless you want your system exactly right and are prepared to problem solve your way to what you want; it can be a very powerful and efficient set up of you’re willing to out he work in). I’d also personally avoid atomic distros as it can be a headache to tweak and run custom software although there are ways if you enjoy leaning new things.