Just got some equipment for my first sim rig and have been playing a ton of Assetto Corsa and DiRT Rally 2.0
DesolateMood
Been marathoning the Assassin's Creed series. Not even with the announcement of the new game in mind, just happened to work out that way
Side note: these aren't very mod friendly, even on windows, but it was such a pain in the ass to get them to work on Linux
They're already grouped together in a list that you already linked in the original post
I've been enjoying it but I will say the thing I'm annoyed about most right now is crafting to fast travel
Just started playing Zero Dawn and cannot believe I'm only getting to these games now
Serious question about this argument. Try translating tenths of inches... to what? I assume you're not talking about converting to metric because then any unit is problematic, and if you're using tenths of an inch then you're using inches, not something else, so... what's the problem?
Been playing The Finals. It's a competitive FPS that my friend says is similar to R6 Siege, but I've never played that so I can't say if it's really accurate. Regardless, I've been having fun
Please go back to reddit
New Super Mario Bros on my sick red Mario DS. Although Pokémon would come shortly after which I remember much more fondly.
There are many (re)posts with this "if paying isn't owning..." slogan and also many memes being made about the reposts. The piracy subreddit doesn't seem to have a whole lot of piracy right now, it's just, well, this
Fellow Linux noob, just started using it earlier this year so if someone with more experience wants to weigh in, please do.
That said, gaming on Linux is pretty good. Steam's proton makes most games playable out of the box, although it's still a good idea to check Proton DB to see if any particular game you want to play is playable.
As for your other question, I'm not totally sure what you mean by accessible and customizable, but I don't think any of your peripherals are going to be distro locked. The Arch Wiki is a pretty good resource for, well, everything, but most relevant to you for your peripherals (it also usually gives good information for any distro, not just arch)