I still can't quite believe it but the Linux user share on Steam has not only remained above 1% for three months, it's actually risen again. We continue to track it each month on our dedicated page but I think it deserves a mention again.
This has been relatively big news for a few months now as we covered when it initially hit 1% again, and last month where it actually stuck. As of September 2021, Linux has managed to hit 1.05% on the Steam Hardware Survey.
Want to see what systems our readers are running? Check out our statistics page.
Going by the last time Valve told us what their monthly active user count was, we can guesstimate that there's around 1,264,200 monthly active users for Linux on Steam.
According to the Valve survey when filtered to just Linux, here's what people are using:
- Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS 64 bit 15.38% +15.38%
- "Manjaro Linux" 64 bit 13.15% +0.43%
- "Arch Linux" 64 bit 11.49% +0.35%
- Pop!_OS 21.04 64 bit 7.57% +0.21%
- Ubuntu 21.04 64 bit 6.42% -0.18%
- Linux Mint 20.2 64 bit 6.01% +0.51%
- Other 39.99% +4.67%
Still not really clear why we are seeing this surge in users. It's quite likely it's as a result of the Steam Deck, which has given Steam Play Proton and Linux more advertising direct from Valve and the wider media. We've seen a lot more posts about people trying out Linux across various social networks, Reddit and more. Regardless of the reason though, it is of course a really great thing to see more people trying out Linux for gaming, work and more. Hopefully this will continue!
We're now well above trend and had 3 months in a row with increases, gut instinct tells me surely we'll see at least one month where the number will go down, even if it's just due to noise in the statistics gathering method.
But the trend is clear, things are looking up for Linux, happy days.
Last edited by gradyvuckovic on 2 October 2021 at 9:48 am UTC
There might be even more interest in Linux when Steam Deck actually comes out.
As for the publicity, I noticed this few days ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvosJN00d2w
I would sure would hope that if they compete on how long they can keep Linux on their main machine, something about that competition gets mentioned later on.
There's at least a few guys at my work who pre-ordered a Steam Deck, and none are big on Linux, much less on Linux gaming. Actually they are more of console gamers, and are comparing the Steam Deck with the likes of Nintendo Switch.
I feel that's ok. So many people are using phones or routers (or lamps :D ) that are running Linux and they don't know...
There has been constant rise for a while now, which in itself hasn't happened this long before. Which is good as rise starts from quite low point.Why don't we encourage ppl or ourselves(those that still Dualboot) to participate in this challenge:
There might be even more interest in Linux when Steam Deck actually comes out.
As for the publicity, I noticed this few days ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvosJN00d2w
I would sure would hope that if they compete on how long they can keep Linux on their main machine, something about that competition gets mentioned later on.
Switch to Linux(on your gaming machine) for at least 6Months or so.
There could even be a Hashtag or some kind of little trend, this could help promoting Linux and generate more momentum.
Maybe some of you guys have a nice Idea for a Hashtag?
Edit: Tell your friends about it or Post about it in social Mdeia, and afterwards share your experience with it.
Last edited by Lamdarer on 2 October 2021 at 10:29 am UTC
There has been constant rise for a while now, which in itself hasn't happened this long before. Which is good as rise starts from quite low point.Why don't we encourage ppl or ourselves(those that still Dualboot) to participate in this challenge:
There might be even more interest in Linux when Steam Deck actually comes out.
As for the publicity, I noticed this few days ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvosJN00d2w
I would sure would hope that if they compete on how long they can keep Linux on their main machine, something about that competition gets mentioned later on.
Switch to Linux(on your gaming machine) for at least 6Months or so.
There could even be a Hashtag or some kind of little trend, this could help promoting Linux and generate more momentum.
Maybe some of you guys have a nice Idea for a Hashtag?
Edit: Tell your friends about it or Post about it in social Mdeia, and afterwards share your experience with it.
Good idea. If just everybody would use the same hashtag, it could gain some traction.
- Many households own more than one computer, typically a newer model, and an older one. Also, a Desktop and a Laptop.
- Having multiple computers means you can use one for all your regular activity (Banking, office software, etc) and *mess around* with the other one. Think I'll have a go at installing a different OS on here.
- People are curious about Linux. In what ways is it different to Windows. Maybe I'd prefer it. Maybe trying it out will be fun.
- People are *slowly* becoming more aware of Surveillance Capitalism, and that Big Corporations are spying on them and manipulating them. People who want to *take back control* look at the options and realise that Linux is the way forward.
- Tech channels like Linus Tech Tips, various gamer channels are creating hype about Linux and the Steam Deck. Hype gets people thinking about things and wanting to know more.
- Valve's work on supporting Linux and developing Proton has made it that the typical gamer is more aware that proper gaming on Linux is now possible. Our group of GamingOnLinux enthusiasts has known it for years, but the realisation is finally dawning on more regular 'Windows' and 'Console' gamers.
- The chicken and egg thing. As marketshare on Linux grows, so will developer interest in supporting Linux. More developer interest means more native games. More native games/working on Proton games means greater appeal of the Linux OS to more general computer users.
Last edited by g000h on 2 October 2021 at 1:48 pm UTC
Almost all games that I have tried worked flawlessly with proton
I've moved to Ubuntu last week after using the windows 11 dev builds for months, and I'm loving everything about ubuntu and linux in general, I haven't encountered any issues with it.
Almost all games that I have tried worked flawlessly with proton
Welcome to the dark side! We've got cooki... penguins!
- People are curious about Linux. In what ways is it different to Windows. Maybe I'd prefer it. Maybe trying it out will be fun.
Also there's tradition that if Microsoft messes up, people get curious about Linux. I think going as far back as Windows Vista. If there's mess on Linux side, there's also possibility to switch distros instead of just going back to Windows.
So instead of having 1/3 less computers, they tried Linux (Mint), and they are finding they like it...
- People are curious about Linux. In what ways is it different to Windows. Maybe I'd prefer it. Maybe trying it out will be fun.
Also there's tradition that if Microsoft messes up, people get curious about Linux. I think going as far back as Windows Vista. If there's mess on Linux side, there's also possibility to switch distros instead of just going back to Windows.
I recall a lot of talk about people moving from Windows 7 (which by Windows standards was rather good) now that it's lost support from Microsoft early last year. I imagine by now people are starting to notice the effects of no longer having updates and are interested in something that's *not* the newer versions of Windows.
Would like to know how others, as Solus, Fedora, Suse are doing. There are not so many big players, but personally with Fedoras switch to Wayland that would be interesting.
Enough is enough.
I currently still have Windows 10 installed on the main HD but I'm not bothered with it.
I run Garuda Linux as my main distro now because it just works well with the 3090 whereas near all other arch distros fail to either boot up live images or fail after install showing black screens or not recognising the nvidia 3090 correctly.
Also running ZorinOS16 on another drive (fantastic Ubuntu based distro) and I've a third smaller ssd which I use then for trying other Linux distros out on.
Garuda Linux though is tops for me, everything just works really well and is the most stable arch based distros I've ever used.
Love your site btw, enjoy reading it every day.
I have try almost all distros in distrowatch top 100, and at least i stay with POP, because is super stable with any updates.
It's not the fastest, but super stable.
I have one small SSD to try all new distros.
I found that, if you have too many boot options(when you press: (F1, F2, F11, F12, ESC) when boot PC, you will get system crash.
When i got like 20+ boot options left from all distro i try, i need to clean all unused UEFI boot records.
Then all are ok with boot options.
From my experience i can say that:
Arch-based, and Viod Linux distros are the fastest with booting and updating/installing packages.
Deepin are good looking, but slow with booting and updating.
Ubuntu 20.04+ breaks often after updates. You will get black screen after booting or cicling log-in. So i need fix it often, sometime i cannot. So i move to POP and don't see any break in any way.
POP are Ubuntu based, but they have many packages that replaces Ubuntu's packages for good.
Last edited by deathxxx on 3 October 2021 at 9:06 am UTC
- People are curious about Linux. In what ways is it different to Windows. Maybe I'd prefer it. Maybe trying it out will be fun.
Also there's tradition that if Microsoft messes up, people get curious about Linux. I think going as far back as Windows Vista. If there's mess on Linux side, there's also possibility to switch distros instead of just going back to Windows.
I know I got frustrated with windows background tasks when I was around 14 and found out about Linux but didn't have a disk to burn. Just before I started my first year of uni my internet stopped working. I looked online untill I found this comment on a how to fix internet on windows video saying it was an update to edge. I reverted to the previous windows update and then paused OS updates. It worked temporally which I assume was because the broken code was part of update and thus removed. However because it was part of Microsoft edge and that's an app the broken code came in via an app update. Thus when I rebooted the internet stopped working. Do I used USB tethering to burn a flash drive and here I am. To think if windows had some sort of accessable package manager like macOS android, probably IOS this wouldn't have been an issue
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