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GOL Survey Results: September

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Valve have released the Steam Hardware Survey results for September and thus, GOL’s first survey comes to an end. 670 people completed the survey, which is quite a nice sample - so thanks all of you who took the time to do it.

As soon as I published the survey, there was a lot of feedback on changes which should be made, and that has been taken on board and incorporated into the new survey. The main change is that all questions are related to “last month” (ie. how many games did you buy last month) rather than being more general.

The new Survey for October is available here - so please fill that in if you have the time.

Here is a question-by-question analysis on the results. This will likely be shorter in the future,but given that this is the first time we are seeing these results, this on will be more detailed:

Q1: Do you use Gnu/Linux as your primary gaming platform?

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Yes - 63.43% (425)
No - 12.54% (84)
Yes, and I only buy games with Linux support - 24.03% (161)

This is kind of expected from readers of a website devoted to Linux gaming - still 87.46% is quite high for Linux overall. The question has been clarified to state “primary PC platform” (rather than just platform) in the new survey.

Q2: What proportion of games do you play through Wine?

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Nearly all games through Wine - 0.60% (4)
More games on Wine than native - 3.74% (25)
About half and half - 7.17% (48)
More native games than through Wine - 15.10% (101)
Nearly all games native - 40.36% (270)
I don't use Wine / don't use Wine for gaming - 33.03% (221)

The total users using Native Linux more than Wine is 88.49%, with 4.34% using Wine more often than Linux to play games. One point of clarification in the next survey is that games using a Wine wrapper should still be counted as native since on Steam it would count as a Linux sale/download.

Q3: What proportion of games do you play on your Windows partition?


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Nearly all games on Windows - 3.89% (26)
More games on Windows than Linux - 8.52% (57)
About half and half - 7.32% (49)
More games on Linux than Windows - 8.37% (56)
Nearly all games on Linux - 17.49% (117)
No Windows partition / don't use Windows for gaming - 54.41% (364)

It was quite surprising to see that over 50% of GOL readers don’t have a Windows partition, and given all the new releases coming out from when this survey was published until December (Tropico 5 and Borderlands 2 already), the number of people dual booting will most likely decrease - which we may have already witnessed this month in the Linux market share increase from Steam Hardware Survey.

Q4: What distribution do you use as your main gaming distribution?

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Debian based - 58.98% (394)
Slackware based - 1.20% (8)
Red Hat based - 3.59% (24)
Suse based - 3.89% (26)
Arch Based - 25.45% (170)
Other (please specify) - 6.89% (46)

It is perhaps no surprise given most developers test on and officially support only Ubuntu that most use a Debian-based distro, however, Arch still has a pretty strong showing. Those who put “other” mostly specified Ubuntu or Mint (which I have now clarified in the new survey that they are Debian-based) and others put Gentoo, which I missed out and have now included. I have also added a question about Desktop Environments.

Q5: Are you a distro hopper? (change distribution more than once every two years)

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Yes - 13.75% (92)
No - 80.12% (536)
Yes, but not for gaming - 6.13% (41)

Quite surprisingly, an overwhelming majority said no and not for gaming (which would leave Steam’s results unaffected) - so either a lot of people lied and said no so as not to annoy Liam, or this may well be less of an issue than we thought.

Q6: What graphics card do you use on your main gaming PC?

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Nvidia - 69.91% (467)
AMD - 23.80% (159)
Intel - 6.29% (42)

This is to be expected considering the bad reputation AMD have on Linux - though with the open source drivers improving quickly and AMD promising to improve their drivers, this may gradually change over time. Just as a comparison, Steam’s results show 51.56% for Nvidia, 29.47% for AMD and 18.63% for Intel - where the increase Intel users can most likely be attributed to the fact that Steam’s survey applies to everyone on Steam while this site appeals more to “enthusiast” gamers who are less likely to use integrated cards. The next survey also asks what drivers you use.

Q7: What CPU do you use on your main gaming PC?

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Intel - 69.21% (463)
AMD - 30.79% (206)
Other - 0.00% (0)

The AMD share is 5% higher than Steam’s results across all platforms, which suggests Linux gamers are more into AMD CPUs than Windows gamers. I don’t know what I was expecting with the “other” response - maybe I thought some of you might duct tape a graphics card to a ARM Raspberry Pi and call it a gaming PC?

Q8: Which of these retailers do you use to buy your Linux games?


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Steam - 96.69% (642)
Desura - 21.08% (140)
GOG.com - 45.93% (305)
Humble Store - 72.14% (479)
Other (please specify) - 7.98% (53)

What we can take from that is that a lot of people use Steam. I have added Indie Gala, KickStarter, GamersGate and developer website to the list of options in the new survey since they appeared often under Other.

Q9: How many Linux games do you buy per month?

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Less than 1 - 17.09% (114)
1-2 - 44.68% (298)
2-5 - 28.19% (188)
5-10 - 7.95% (53)
10+ - 2.10% (14)

This is one result which will most likely vary heavily from month to month, depending on bundle offerings, Steam summer/winter sales, new releases, etc. Given the usual drought in this period and how Humble Bundles have had less and less Linux games lately, it is understandable that most people answered 2 or less. Again - the new survey refers specifically to the previous month - ie. October’s survey will ask how many you bought in September.

Q10: Will you be getting a Steam Machine any time after release?

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Yes - 11.49% (77)
No - 29.25% (196)
Still undecided - 30.60% (205)
I already built my own (or planning to build my own) - 28.66% (192)

These were very interesting results, and I would have separated the will/have built if I had known that result would be so high. Rather than seeing how this one changes on a monthly basis, I think this one will remain out of the next survey and appear again on release of the Steam Machine. Instead, there will be a monthly “one off” question relevant to that month. For example, September’s big release was Tropico so the question for October will be “Did you or are you planning on buying Tropico” or this could be CS:S or Borderlands 2 next month. Suggestions welcome!

Conclusions

In the monthly Steam Hardware Survey articles, Liam has stated Linux users not using Steam or distro-hoppers as possible causes to the changes in Linux users we see month to month on Steam Hardware Survey, and up until now I also thought the same, but this survey has thrown much of that out the window. This shows one of the main reasons why having such a survey is important to Linux Gaming - because there are things we are still in the dark about given that Linux gaming is still a fairly new thing.

Hopefully, this will provide some interesting reading for us as we watch the stats change on a monthly basis, and also provide some useful information for developers looking to make games for Linux since currently there isn't much out there. If you can keep filling out this survey on a monthly basis, it will most likely be a big help to all of us so remember to fill in this month's survey.

UPDATE:

There seems to be a bit of confusion with one of the new questions on this month's survey. "If you stopped using Windows last month completely for gaming, please state your reasons why (ie. a new game release, realised you never use it, etc.)" is specifically aimed at people who stopped using Windows altogether LAST MONTH since it would be interesting to get an idea over time of why people stop using it and how the release of certain games affects that. Currently people are saying why they don't use Windows generally for games, which is interesting but not the point of the question. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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About the author -
After many years of floating through space on the back of a missile, following a successful career in beating people up for not playing Sega Saturn, the missile returned to earth. Upon returning, I discovered to my dismay that the once great console had been discontinued and Sega had abandoned the fight to dominate the world through 32-bit graphical capabilities.

After spending some years breaking breeze blocks with my head for money and being mocked by strangers, I have found a new purpose: to beat up people for not playing on Linux.
See more from me
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47 comments
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Apopas Oct 5, 2014
Quoting: sevAlso not clear on why people object to Steam. These are non-open source games, so who cares if I buy them on Steam or directly from the dev site?
I'm not going to buy a single game even from a dev's site if this game has any morph of DRM. Never!
It has nothing to do with the profits Steam gets. Simply Steam promotes the use of DRM and as that, even if it is responsible for the improvement of Linux as gaming platform, I will avoid it. That's why I support Humble Bundle and GOG. The day they add DRM as well, will be the day I will stop to buy from them.
Apopas Oct 5, 2014
Quoting: sharkwouterI kinda wonder what other means in the distro part, I can only come up with Gentoo, PCLinuxOS and Mageia.
I use Gentoo on my laptop and Chakra on my Desktop.
Eike Oct 5, 2014
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Quoting: Guest
Quoting: EikePeople using Debian 7 (Wheezy) should know that they need a newer libc
You’re saying that as if there was some sort of Debian Gaming Licence that people can only get by passing a glibc test.

If I remember correctly, Steam doesn't even start without the newer libc?
(And according to the gamingonlinux survey, the vast majority of Linux players do use Steam...)
lucinos Oct 5, 2014
In my view Debian-based should be split to ubuntu-based (includes ubuntu flavors and mint and some others) and debian-based (includes lmde, sparky and others). Both because they are somehow not very compatible and because they have so much share.

I am really happy to see so many Arch and Arch-based (like Manjaro) users!
kreativt Oct 5, 2014
I fully understand that not all questions can be in this survey, so this is not a real suggestion, but... I am really curious how many people are like me: Linux users since many years, with the "benefit" of not being able to play games any longer and hence we could save save a lot of money on hardware.

Then Humble and Valve came along and made it possible for us to play games... but all we have are crappy old laptops that needed not to be replaced for a long time (since Linux is so lean on resources). I am a scientist at a university - we don't make money - we make science! I am saving for a Steam machine but I am almost happy that it is delayed because I could still barely afford a controller (family and bad times... sigh).

Anyhow - the question could be something as simple as "Do you have a computer that is primarily used for gaming", or "Is your primary gaming computer a laptop" or a one-of special question "How much did you so far spend on gaming hardware during 2014".

Don't worry about me - Democracy 3 and Dungeons of Dredmor take me through the weeks now. And Half Life 1 worked well until my dedicated NVIDIA graphics card burned out a few months ago.
Segata Sanshiro Oct 5, 2014
QuoteAnyhow - the question could be something as simple as "Do you have a computer that is primarily used for gaming", or "Is your primary gaming computer a laptop" or a one-of special question "How much did you so far spend on gaming hardware during 2014".

Don't worry about me - Democracy 3 and Dungeons of Dredmor take me through the weeks now. And Half Life 1 worked well until my dedicated NVIDIA graphics card burned out a few months ago.

That's actually a very good question. You're probably right in saying that most Linux users didn't have great hardware up until recently, or still don't - but this is something which is most likely changing now as bigger games are coming out. I'll consider that for the next one, maybe as a permanent question.

Democracy 3 was pretty good. I ended up getting all of the achievements in that. As a politics graduate I have a lot of issues with the game though, I would consider it to be a "post-democracy" simulator rather that a democracy sim. It simulates a society where democracy and political discourse is limited to a few narrow policy decisions (as it is in the west), while real societal change is out of the political agenda (things like the economic or political system) - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-democracy . People like Marcuse and Zizek refer to this as "cultural hegemony", whereby the populace is incapable of seeing any possibilities beyond those which are in the interests of the status quo.

I still really enjoyed the game, and even made a mod to play as Argentina - but for some reason the upload never worked so I'm the only person to have played it.
Apopas Oct 5, 2014
Quoting: EKRboiI honestly have not figure out what is eating my "extra" ram, there seems to be about 300mb I can't exactly account for. I don't use a display manager so when I boot it, it goes right to tty1 and it's usually sitting at right around 300mb used. I have 8gb (bios report 8192mb) but linux shows only 7901mb so maybe that is what makes up the difference since that's 289mb differenc.
But if Linux doesn't count it at all, how can the apps use it?
QuoteMy hardware must be reserving it for something. I know my motherboard has a hardware iommu and I'm pretty sure it reserves 64mb, but not sure what might be reserving the rest. Onboard sound possibly?
Integrated vga maybe?
QuoteX is the next largest ram user at 63mb and openbox is using 42mb. Plus the terminal I'm running HTOP in is eating 50mb. the rest is normal low ram system processes.
This is because in Arch the binaries are compiled with a lot of dependencies. In my Gentoo, where I strip the majority of them because I don't need them, X, openbox and lxterminal run with 20 MB each one. What terminal do you use?
Quotespiffy simple OB session you have there :)
Openbox is wonderful but unfortunately I'm going to ditch it for Enlightenment's favour (which is more than cool as well) because I want to move my laptop to Wayland and I very much doubt that Openbox is going ever to be ported because of its hard xorg-x11 dependencies. I will miss my pipe-menus :(
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