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Comment by himata4113

5 days ago

Because I would have to reboot into windows including any active applications I have? That also means I would have to maintain TWO operating systems instead of just one.

Now I have a form of WSL (LSW heh). There is a reason why everyone on windows uses WSL these days, same concept applies for LSW, but for games.

> Because I would have to reboot into windows including any active applications I have?

In a gaming-only setup, Windows requires virtually no maintenance. Plus gaming itself is a monotasking activity.

I actually find it positive having to reboot, so I start with a gaming session, and I only play, and when I'm done I'm done. I get the appeal of everything-in-Linux (it was my setup) but it's also a hassle.

  • > In a gaming-only setup, Windows requires virtually no maintenance.

    This is not remotely true anymore with Windows updates automatically restarting computers, windows updates pushing breaking changes especially in regards to GPU drivers, and more anticheats requiring secure boot.

    • These points are not (all) technically correct; for example, Windows does not restart "automatically" - it gives multiple options (this is important for dual booting).

      Besides that, the root discussion is having a dual boot vs a virtualized windows; maintenance applies the same to both, it doesn't disappear when virtualizing Windows - the different is (the value one places) to context switching.

Do you have anything on your LSW because i have a handful of software that i do not want to miss on Linux.