This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/linux_gaming by /u/The_4ngry_5quid on 2024-01-02 00:20:38.


I finally made the switch! I’ve always been hesitant to swtich my Gaming PC to Linux, as I didn’t want to take the negative performance hit (more about that later). With Windows 12 on the horizon, I’m finally sick enough to swtich to Linux. My Gaming PC is relatively high end. The specs are:

CPU: i9-9900K

Memory: 64GB DDR4

GPU: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 12GB

Storage: 7TB mixture of Gen 3 M.2 SSDs and SATA SSDs.

I decided to benchmark my system on both a fresh install of Windows 11 and a fresh install of Ubuntu 23.10. Both have the latest drivers and are otherwise up to date. Nothing was intentionally running in the background (apart from everything that already runs in the background in Windows). I tried to benchmark a mixture of new and old titles, with a particular interest in how the Proton-layer would affect performance. All tests are run on the same day with the same settings. Here are the results!

Red Dead Redemption 2 (2019) - Benchmark

Running on Proton 8.0-4 for Linux

Windows Linux
Average FPS 72 74.9
Minimum FPS 58.6 38.5
Maximum FPS 79.7 121.6

Minecraft (2011) with shaders, mods and a resource pack

Running natively on both

Windows Linux
Looking Down in a hole 140 195
Looking at a specific spot on the house 120 170

GTA V (2015) - Benchmark

Running on Proton 8.0-4 for Linux

Windows Linux
Minimum FPS 107 105
Maximum FPS 188 188

Team Fortress 2 (2007) - Bot Match

Running on Proton 8.0-4 for Linux

Windows Linux
Minimum FPS 130 169
Maximum FPS 279 287

Assassin’s Creed: Mirage (2023) - Benchmark

Running on Wine-GE-Proton8-27-LoL

Windows Linux
Average FPS 116 87
1% Lows 76 45
Maximum FPS 154 136

Overall, I’m really surprised!

TLDR; On these 5 titles at 1440p, a fresh install of Linux ran with:

15% higher average FPS than Windows.

11.7% lower minimum FPS than Windows.

11% higher maximum FPS than Windows.