I want to make the move to Mint at the end of Win10 in a week or so, but I’ve heard some horror stories about how tough it can be to get Nvidia GPUs working with them. As it is I have a 4060TI and no money for an AMD GPU. If I can’t get my GPU working with Linux I’m probably gonna end up having to stick with Windows untim I can afford an AMD GPU, the thought of which doesn’t exactly excite me.

  • Sophienomenal@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    7 days ago

    If you want the easiest experience possible with Nvidia, I’d recommend Bazzite (and go with the KDE Plasma version). It comes with everything preinstalled and consistent across installations. Plus, it’s a tank when it comes to stability; very hard to break it due to the atomic nature. Just install everything through the built in store and you’ll be fine. Installing programs is much easier than Windows in Linux due to easy software stores. Bazzite currently uses Bazaar as its software store.

  • golden_zealot@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    It wasn’t for me on Debian 12/13. I just had to add the repo for the drivers and run 1 or 2 lines of bash and I’ve been good ever since with my 3090.

    • LeFantome@programming.dev
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      2 days ago

      Most distros do not require the extra repos. For Debian though, you do. The ones shipped with the distro, even Debian 13, are too old and have problems.

  • kuneho@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    RTX5070 works almost straight out from the box on Kubuntu stable. Had to try few of the drivers from the built-in utility to find which worked, but the latest version and open one did the trick. So no, it wasn’t hard to get it working properly :)

  • FreddiesLantern@leminal.space
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    6 days ago

    Currently have 2 machines on MX with nvidia cards. One was flawless from the get go the other took some trail and error by installing some extra packages but I got there.

    (Through the package manager I might add, no files edited or anything)

    Mint has a somewhat similar user experience. Chances are you’ll be just fine. Try out a live usb.

  • rapchee@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    mint, pop os works with my rtx 2080, I’ve played through half life alyx on mint
    but just dual boot, have a fallback windows install

  • Broken@lemmy.ml
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    6 days ago

    Its pretty straightforward. You just need to have secureboot disabled in bios so a third party driver can load.

  • Kruulos@sopuli.xyz
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    7 days ago

    I used Linux Mint and GTX 2070 for over a half a year without any major problems. Installation was incredibly easy as there was a dialog box asking to install drivers and everything just worked. I have 4 monitor setup even.

    Ultimately I switched to AMD (last week) because of the tiny problems that I experienced but mostly because I wanted to support AMD and could reason for an GPU upgrade.

  • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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    7 days ago

    I was going to say you’ll probably be fine, but if you’re considering Mint you’ll definitely be fine.

    Terminology you don’t need to know: Mint is still using x11, which Nvidia works fine with. I assume mint won’t switch to Wayland until it works smoothly on Nvidia too.

    My partner is using mint on a 3080. I think she had one graphical bug in one game one time after an update. Mint has a program specifically used to roll back to a past Nvidia driver. She chose the driver from before the update, rebooted, and the bug was gone. Just gotta remember to switch back to using latest later when a new driver comes out.

  • Narri N.@lemmygrad.ml
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    6 days ago

    RTX 2080 Ti and CachyOS (Arch-based distro with an emphasis on gaming performance), most everything that should works out-of-the-box. I wouldn’t stress it, try a live USB first. Edit: also I’m using Wayland, which has been worse with NVIDIA than X11 that Mint apparently uses. So I’m pretty confident you’ll be alright.

  • monovergent@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    On modern versions of common distros, it’ll probably work just fine if you install the driver from your distro’s repos. Don’t touch NVIDIA’s downloadable .run installer.

    It’s getting better for Nvidia support on Linux, but there’s more edge case problems than with AMD or Intel graphics.

  • Sunsofold@lemmings.world
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    7 days ago

    I’ve been trying different flavors on my machines with Nvidia cards. It usually just works well enough for me. Did Garuda for a microsecond, mint for a moment, Ubuntu for a few, and am now trying Debian and Endeavour. I’ve honestly had more issues coming from arch peculiarities than from nvidia. Just give it a go if you have the drive space. It seems like there’s more of a question of how well your chosen flavor meshes with your chosen hardware than one of ‘can I even get this working?’

  • sobchak@programming.dev
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    7 days ago

    My main workstation runs Debian and has a 3090. No issues that I’m aware of. When I used to use Mint, I think I remember Mint having a GUI to easily select the Nvidia driver you want to use, so it was very easy. In Debian, you just have to run ~10 commands in shell to install the proprietary Nvidia driver. I have an older laptop with an Nvidia GPU too; that one is more annoying because I don’t think any distro supports integrated/dedicated GPU auto-switching (I just have it set to use the Nvidia GPU all the time).

  • neomachino@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 days ago

    A few years ago when I went to actually use the GPU in my laptop I realized I never installed the drivers. I think it was a 3050 or something pretty low end.

    It took maybe 20 minutes, most of that time was waiting for things to install. I’ve heard the horror stories so I wasn’t excepting it to work and was ready to give up at the first sign on resistance but there really wasn’t any. That was on Fedora, a bit later I switched to Debian and I remember running into an issue getting it to work but it was small enough that I don’t remember what the issue was.