This is your once a month reminder to make sure your PC information is correct on your user profiles. A fresh batch of statistics is generated on the 1st of each month.
You need to be logged in to see when you last updated your PC info!
You can see the statistics any time on this page.
PC Info is automatically purged if it hasn't been updated, or if you don't click the link to remain in for 2 years. This way we prevent too much stale data and don't hold onto your data for longer than required. If this is still correct and it has been a long time since you updated, you can simply click here to continue to be included. If this isn't correct, click here to go to your User Control Panel to update it!
Some you may have missed, popular articles from the last month:
All posts need to follow our rules. For users logged in: please hit the Report Flag icon on any post that breaks the rules or contains illegal / harmful content. Guest readers can email us for any issues.
That's the problem with these questions. The answer might change even if your usage profile stays the same. I would expect quite a bit of stale data for these.
Edit: Wine/Steam Play questioning was removed. In future, we may look to introduce other questions about them but the previous questions didn't fit with the way this survey works and frankly they weren't even useful. Thanks for the feedback. This does streamline it a bit too for now :)
Last edited by Liam Dawe on 25 June 2020 at 12:10 pm UTC
Just was going to ask. I really think it's useful to have something WINE/Proton related! I don't care for the difference, though. Like, are you buying Windows only games to play on Linux? Regularly, seldom, only whitelisted Proton, never-ever.
Last edited by Eike on 25 June 2020 at 12:32 pm UTC
My guess would be 90% systemD, but I am curious about the others as well.
How does that pertain to gaming? Unless there's a direct benefit to using one init over another in terms of e.g. gaming performance, I don't see why it'd be a useful metric to track here.
The "recently" question was not bad, even if it gets stale. I saw it as reflecting the user's frequency of use. You could adjust the wording a bit to be less about the direct past (last week, last month) and to be more about the general case (how often per year, per month).
You also want to be careful not to lose continuity with your old stats. You have a useful survey tracking linux gaming over time. Suddenly removing a question destroys the ability to track trends in that area.
The most popular GPU: still AMD RX 580.
Last edited by Shmerl on 25 June 2020 at 5:54 pm UTC
That's a very edge question in relation to gaming. And I'll make a wild guess that the vast majority are using systemd anyway.
Last edited by Shmerl on 25 June 2020 at 6:00 pm UTC
Can you please add monitor refresh rate and usage of adaptive sync points? Those are directly gaming related and would be interesting to see, in addition to already existing resolution.
I thought of asking for Variable Refresh Rate / Adaptive Sync as well.
Still a fan of a special question per month that's interesting, but maybe not worth to be included in the survey, BTW.
Last edited by Shmerl on 25 June 2020 at 6:30 pm UTC
I really like this idea, however, I am wondering how this would work with multiple monitors ?
For example, I have 2 monitors, one is 180Hz with Gsync, and the other is 75Hz, so technically I could play at 180Hz (max) with Gsync enabled, (like I did when I was using Windows), but under linux, I am capped at 75Hz with no Gsync...
So I am afraid that the answer to these question will be biased.
If I had such a setup, i'd disable the second monitor for gaming to get what I payed for.
I guess the same way it works now with question for resolution? The answer only allows one option.
Last edited by Shmerl on 26 June 2020 at 7:55 am UTC